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Tag: Asana

  • AWS Experiences Third Outage This Month

    AWS Experiences Third Outage This Month

    AWS has experienced its third outage this month, impacting yet more sites and services.

    AWS has had a rough December, with outages that have impacted some of the largest online services. According to The Verge, this latest outage has hit Slack, Epic Games Store, Asana, and others.

    The company said it had fixed the issue as of 9:13 AM ET, but some customers may continue to see issues.

    A look at DownDetector shows many familiar companies — ones that were impacted by previous outages — experiencing issues again. While the issues appear to be tapering off, there’s still a ways to go before things return to normal.

  • Asana Going Public, Spends Big on AWS

    Asana Going Public, Spends Big on AWS

    Asana has filed to go public and, in the process, disclosed its commitment to Amazon’s AWS as its cloud platform of choice.

    Popular collaboration tool Asana filed to go public this week. Asana is the brainchild of Facebook co-founder Dustin Moskovitz and Justin Rosenstein, a former Facebook and Google engineer.

    What’s more interesting than Asana’s IPO, however, is the disclosure of its cloud budget and where it is spending that budget. Business Insider delved into the paperwork and discovered that Asana has agreed to spend at least $20 million on AWS cloud services.

    “Asana in December 2018 agreed to a 27-month contract with AWS, committing to spend at least $9 million on cloud services in 2019, and an additional $11 million in 2020,” wrote Business Insider. “The company had $5.4 million left to spend to fulfill the minimum as of April 30 of this year.”

    As the cloud market continues to heat up, with AWS, Microsoft and Google fighting for dominance, this is a big win for AWS.

  • Workona Launches Desktop For The Cloud; Raises $6 Million in Seed Funding

    Workona Launches Desktop For The Cloud; Raises $6 Million in Seed Funding

    Workona has announced “the launch of their cloud desktop, a work management platform that allows users to access and manage resources across more than 75 popular cloud apps from a single unified system.”

    The company recently completed “a $6 million seed funding round, led by K9 Ventures and August Capital, to accelerate its product development and user acquisition.”

    Recognizing that “modern teams run on cloud software,” Workona is trying to bring the disparate pieces of a cloud-based workflow together in a productive, intuitive manner. Workona’s cloud-based desktop connects to the most popular cloud apps in use today, such as Amazon, Asana, Basecamp, Box, Dropbox, Evernote, Google Docs, Outlook, Zoom and more. Each app can be accessed and worked with inside Workona. Shared workspaces take collaboration up a notch, increasing productivity even more.

    “So many people spend their days working in the cloud, but there was no platform to manage that work. That’s what Workona does,” said Quinn Morgan, Workona co-founder and CEO. “Previously, all of your cloud apps, projects, and documents were scattered across the web. Workona’s cloud desktop pulls them together into one powerful system.”

    Having a central location to access different tools and platforms significantly increases a user’s efficiency.

    “Workona is a force multiplier because it impacts every level of your work,” Morgan said. “Your apps and projects are at your fingertips, so every action you take is significantly faster.”

    “Workona solves a problem that is staring us in the face, but we haven’t noticed it yet,” said Manu Kumar, Workona board member and K9 Ventures investor. “Microsoft and Apple used to put an enormous amount of engineering power into optimizing the desktop, but all that was forgotten when we transitioned to working in the browser. Workona has picked up where they left off by bringing the best features of a desktop to the cloud.”

    The company says that early users come “from both startups and Fortune 500 companies, and include industry leaders like Twitter, Salesforce, Amazon, and NASA.” It’s a safe bet that list will continue to grow.