This week, I’ve taken my cloud watching on the road to Silicon Valley for the Cloud Connect conference.  The program starts on Tuesday morning with 3 hours of keynotes and general sessions.  The following “industry visionaries” are scheduled to “discuss the growth and future of cloud computing.” 

  • Adam Gross, Senior Vice President, Marketing and Sales, Dropbox
  • Guy Rosen, CEO, Vircado and Blogger, JackOfAllClouds.com
  • Dan Elron, Managing Partner, Technology Strategy, Accenture
  • Alistair Croll, Co-Founder, Bitcurrent
  • Chris McGarry, Co-Founder and CEO, Omnetic
  • Jas Dhillon, General Manager Evidence.Com and TASER Virtual Systems; Chief Strategy Officer, TASER International, TASER International
  • Bob Flores, Founder and President, Applicology, Inc.and Former CTO of the CIA
  • Matt Thompson, West Region General Manager, Developer & Platform Evangelism, Microsoft
  • Mark Prichard, Senior Principal Product Manager, Java Platforrm Group, Oracle
  • Vijay Bhagavath, U.S. Equity Research, Deutsche Bank Securities Inc.
  • Rodney Joffe, Senior Vice President, and Senior Technologist, Neustar
  • Scott Chasin, CTO, McAfee Software-as-a-Service
  • Darren Feher, CEO, Conviva and Former CTO for NBC

First up, with a quick introduction is Alistair Croll, the Cloud Connect content program chair.  Alistair says “cloud computing is the fuel for the next level of human consciousness.  Cloud Computing is the gray matter for human 2.0.

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Posted by brenda michelson at 1:49 pm in 100-days, Blog, provider positions | Permalink | Comments(3)
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In IBM’s November 2009 SOA Newsletter, Fill Bowen, Program Manager responsible for Smart SOA in IBM Software Group, discusses the relationship between SOA and Cloud Computing, and shares prerequisites for providing services in a cloud and consuming services in a cloud.

The newsletter emphasizes that SOA and Cloud Computing are complements.  SOA is an architectural style, while Cloud Computing is a deployment model.  These concepts can come together in the design of the cloud computing environment:

"’SOA is an architectural style for building applications, loosely coupled, allowing composition,’ says Jerry Cuomo, CTO of IBM’s WebSphere business. ‘Can we build a datacenter infrastructure on SOA principles? Yes, and that’s the cloud, so it’s a service-oriented infrastructure,’ he adds. ‘It’s taking that architectural principle of SOA and applying it to an infrastructure.’" – InfoWorld, “The cloud-SOA connection

In discussing the SOA-Cloud Computing relationship, Fill offers a helpful analogy using books and a library:

“An interesting analogy for cloud and SOA is to think of books in a library. The books represent the services that customers can access once the library acquires them, and the library building represents the cloud where people come to check out the books/services. Books are reusable, and several books might make up a series or topic. Someone writes the book once and it is reused many times.

Using our analogy of books in the library, there are two components to consider when thinking about services in a cloud environment. One is the providing of services (books) to the cloud (library). And the other is the consuming (checking out) of those services (books). Each has different requirements.”

Read the article to learn of the prerequisites for providing and consuming services in a cloud. 

 

[Disclosure: IBM is not a direct client of my firm, Elemental Links, however IBM is a founding sponsor of the SOA Consortium, which is a client.]

Posted by brenda michelson at 11:11 am in cloud computing environment (cce), Cloud Watch, fundamentals, governance, provider positions, services architecture, virtualization | Permalink | Comments(0)
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Gartner Fellows Neil MacDonald and David Mitchell Smith spoke with Ray Ozzie, chief software architect at Microsoft, “to discuss his vision for cloud computing, and the impact on enterprise computing and the IT industry.”  Their conversation has been published as a Gartner RAS Core Research Note (G00172235), and made available for public consumption via a Microsoft reprint.

Published Key Findings:

  • “Ozzie’s (and thus, Microsoft’s) vision of cloud computing emphasizes hybrid enterprise/cloud computing, where organizations choose when and where computing takes place locally versus in cloud-based infrastructure, and emphasizes that the on-premises and cloud-based solutions work seamlessly together.
  • As with early encryption issues, Ozzie believes that security and privacy issues will be addressed as the industry matures in a combination of legislative advances, as well as industry cooperation.
  • Ozzie’s vision for cloud computing includes system infrastructure, an application platform and finished applications being delivered as a service.
  • Microsoft is investing in its own data centers because it must in order to provide its consumer-based services. It believes it is helping to lead the industry in providing innovations in data center architectures.
  • Ozzie believes the future of cloud computing is in the experience delivered via a browser across multiple devices — mobile, PC and TV-type screens — which is a vision he refers to as "three screens and a cloud."

The entire report is well-worth the read.

A quick excerpt on Ozzie’s hybrid model vision:

"Ozzie: I believe in a hybrid model. I fundamentally, deeply believe in a hybrid model at the experience side and at the back-end side.

At the back-end side, it depends on the size of enterprise and the workload, as well as the segment of the enterprise and whether it is highly regulated or whatever. The decisions regarding what to keep on-premises versus what to distribute into the cloud will vary dramatically. Very small businesses will put almost everything into the cloud. Very large businesses will put all their infrastructural systems, such as mail, phone systems and document management, into the cloud. Enterprise applications that have high integration requirements and a lot of legacy issues will stay on-premises. What happens in the middle is a mix."

“…But again, it’s a hybrid architecture.  If you don’t have the center, then you can’t rendezvous. You can’t find each other. You can’t connect in any way, shape or form.  However, if you don’t have the edge, then you don’t have the agility. You pay for ingress and egress when you don’t have to.”

 

 

Posted by brenda michelson at 9:32 am in cloud computing environment (cce), Cloud Watch, data center advances, provider positions, software architecture | Permalink | Comments(0)
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Energize and Save, Tod Nielsen, Chief Operating Officer, VMWare, opening keynote

Todd starts by talking about all of the government agencies VMWare works with.  The list is extensive.  One example, the CIA is virtualizing 4000 servers, saving millions in capital and energy costs.

Gartner factoid, 89% of virtualized apps run on VMWare (dated December 2008).

Early in virtualization journey, 0 – 20% virtualized, the big savings is Capex.  These projects are typically for IT owned assets, file and print, mail etc.  Next phase, is line of business applications, the concerns here shift from just capex to “speeds and feeds”, business continuity, up-time.  Often, these are less critical, tier 2 and 3 applications.  Todd shares anecdote of organization where CIO was concerned that tier 2 and 3 had better up-time than tier 1, response tiers 2 – 3 are virtualized, was driver for tier 1 virtualization as well.  So, capex, energy and up-time.

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Posted by brenda michelson at 10:54 am in Blog, data center advances, provider positions, sustainability, virtualization | Permalink | Comments(0)
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David Berlind is our Evening in the Cloud host. David says the discussion shouldn’t be about cloud computing definition, it should be about cloud computing benefits. The benefits will lead to the ‘right’ definition. Panel Format, each panelist has 8 minutes to “pitch us” as though they were visiting our organization. more >>

Posted by brenda michelson at 7:13 pm in adoption, Blog, compliance, cyber risk, data, provider positions | Permalink | Comments(0)
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Jake Sorofman, rPath, James Duncan, Joyent and Chet Kapoor, Sonoa Systems chat with Alistair Croll on the futures of cloud.  These companies offer software, products that are adjacent to, or run on, the cloud.  They are not cloud operators.

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Posted by brenda michelson at 4:56 pm in Blog, cloud computing offering, provider positions, security, standards | Permalink | Comments(0)
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