Two separate announcements made at the OpenStack Summit mark significant milestones toward a globally federated set of OpenStack powered public and private clouds. Users will now benefit from greater choice across geography, service, price and performance, with the ability to plug into a global network of OpenStack Powered cloud service providers.
 
 The first announcement, unveiled during this morning¹s keynote address, brings new interoperability testing requirements for products branded as 'OpenStack Powered', including public clouds, hosted private clouds, distributions and appliances. Fourteen companies have already tested their products against the new standards, and results are available in the OpenStack Marketplace. Users can now count on 'OpenStack Powered' products and clouds around the world to deliver a consistent set of core services. This allows applications to be written one time, with confidence that they can run on a choice of OpenStack public and private clouds globally.
 
 To find products that meet the new OpenStack Powered interoperability requirements and support federated identity, visit the OpenStack Maketplace at openstack.org/marketplace.
 Community members with products or services that have passed OpenStack Powered interoperability testing are:
 Blue Box Cloud
 Bright Computing
 DataCentred
 HP
 IBM
 Internap
 Mirantis
 Rackspace
 Red Hat
 SUSE
 SwiftStack
 Ubuntu
 UnitedStack
 Vexxhost
 VMware
 
 In the second announcement, a pioneering group of OpenStack cloud providers have committed to support the new federated identity feature available in the OpenStack Kilo release with offerings expected by the end of this year. Identity federation enables hybrid and multi-cloud scenarios with a seamless user experience.
 
 The growing list of companies committed to delivering federated identity currently includes these 31:
 Anchor
 Aptira
 Auro
 Blue Box Cloud
 Breqwatr
 Bright Computing
 Cisco
 City Network
 Cloud and Heat
 DataCentred
 DreamHost
 Dualtec
 EasyStack
 Elastx
 Enter.it
 HP
 IBM
 Internap
 KIO Networks
 Mirantis
 Morphlabs
 Oracle
 Rackspace
 Red Hat
 Stratoscale
 SUSE
 TeutoStack
 Transcirrus
 Ubuntu
 UnitedStack
 Vexxhost
 
 This list of participants offers OpenStack users access to public and hosted private clouds at data centers in 40 cities and 17 countries throughout North and South America, Europe, and Asia Pacific. Other participants in this announcement offer products and services to build and operate private clouds for customers worldwide.
 
 "OpenStack cloud providers are delivering on the promise of a global network of clouds that app developers can leverage depending on their needs," said Jonathan Bryce, executive director of the OpenStack Foundation. "Today, the OpenStack community is putting app developers in the driver¹s seat, giving them the power to choose the price, performance and geography that best suit the needs of their apps, matching workloads to the best resources. No other cloud platform promises what OpenStack can deliver."