Apparently, our Top Cloud Computing Stories for May podcast was well-received, because David Linthicum invited me back to swap top stories for June.  Check out our podcast.  Then, consider this: What will be the ‘Tang’ of cloud computing?

Posted by brenda michelson at 11:51 am in Big Data, Blog, cloud computing advances, interoperability & portability, pundit positions, virtualization | Permalink | Comments(0)
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Last week, Dave Linthicum invited me back to his podcast to discuss top cloud computing stories for May.  There were no set rules on what constituted “top”.  We each picked 3 stories, which we didn’t reveal to each other beforehand. 

As for the results, I will say that we had one story in common, two mainstream stories (one each) and two wildcards (one each).  The format was fun, so we’ll do another at the end of June.

To listen to the podcast (16 minutes or so), go here.

Posted by brenda michelson at 2:37 pm in Blog, adoption, pundit positions | Permalink | Comments(0)
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On Friday, David Linthicum invited me on his cloud computing podcast to chat about what we heard, and didn’t hear, at the Cloud Connect conference.  Naturally, our discussion wound its way to the connections of cloud computing, enterprise architecture, service-oriented architecture and data architecture.

Our podcast is Picking Apart Cloud ConnectCheck it out.

Posted by brenda michelson at 10:11 am in Blog, enterprise architecture, enterprise integration, pundit positions, services architecture, software architecture | Permalink | Comments(0)
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In his InfoWorld blog, Dave Linthicum cites (yet another) survey on CIO plans (or not) for cloud computing.  No surprise, the survey reported that “security concerns were the biggest barriers to widespread consumption of cloud services.

Dave believes the true problem is one of understanding:

“I’m not sure that the rapidly emerging cloud computing universe has done a good enough job in leading existing enterprise IT shops to cloud computing. Everyone is talking about the "why" — leaving out the "how" and the "what."

CIOs are a bit wary around another paradigm shift. You have to admit that we’ve had one or two over the last 20 years that have not gone anywhere, and the reality for several others never measured up to the hype. CIOs are measured by their ability to make the trains run on time within their own spheres of control, not about how innovative they can get with emerging and overhyped technology.”

Dave continues with ever-practical advice on how to “enlighten the rank-and-file CIO out there around the benefits of cloud computing”:

“First, look at cloud computing for what it really is: architectural options to make existing IT systems more effective. You drive this from the inside out, not the outside in. There is no "big switch" or "huge shift." Instead, you solve small, well-defined problems with the best solution. In some instances, cloud computing is an instance of a solution and not always the solution.

Second, do a prototype. Cloud computing means not having to buy hardware and software, so taking cloud computing for a test-drive is inexpensive and a great learning experience.

Finally, and most important, understand that cloud computing is an evolutionary — not a revolutionary — path for most organizations. The use of cloud computing will be around a systemic change that takes a long period of time for most IT organizations. That’s something a CIO can responsibly handle.”

For more practical cloud computing advice from Dave, check out his latest book: Cloud Computing and SOA Convergence in Your Enterprise.

Posted by brenda michelson at 10:56 am in Cloud Watch, adoption, pundit positions | Permalink | Comments(1)
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Quickly discovering I wasn’t the only enterprise architect, services architecture type interested in cloud computing, I invited David Linthicum, SOA expert, enterprise architecture advocate, blogger, founder of Blue Mountain Labs, and all around nice guy, to speak at the March SOA Consortium meeting on the Intersections of SOA and Cloud Computing. 

The podcast of Dave’s talk is now available from the SOA Consortium.  What follows is the “blurb” on the podcast that I posted at SOA Consortium Insights.  If like me, you are getting intentional in your cloud watching, I highly recommend this podcast.

“Linthicum opened by sharing the distinctions and connections between SOA and cloud computing. SOA is something you do, an architectural pattern. Cloud computing is an architectural option.

 more >>

Posted by brenda michelson at 10:11 am in Blog, adoption, enterprise architecture, pundit positions, services architecture, use cases | Permalink | Comments(0)
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Dave is talking about Winning with Cloud Computing Step-by-Step.  The presentation is up on slideshare.  Dave’s presentation is based on work from a forthcoming book. [Link added 10.27.2009]

The basic idea is you can extend your SOA to the cloud, utilizing external resources, either business or informational services, or infrastructure resources.

Cloud & SOA lets us mix an enterprise architecture cocktail.  [works for me]

You can’t replace enterprise architecture with cloud computing.  You can’t replace SOA with cloud computing.  You always need an architectural strategy.  Adding cloud computing allows you to cash-in on SOA.  more >>

Posted by brenda michelson at 11:16 am in Blog, adoption, enterprise architecture, pundit positions, services architecture | Permalink | Comments(0)
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