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Rate Content: Document Name: The future is in the Clouds Document Description: There have been a few paradigm shifts in IT over the past 30 years. First was the introduction of the PC which changed computing forever. This moved us from a very structured and controlled mainframe environment to an empowered and chaotic distributed environment. The next big change was the introduction of the Internet in the workplace. This has fueled globalization and lead to more demanding and tech savvy customers. The next big thing is cloud computing, specifically, Platform as a Service (PaaS). Before I go into why I believe this to be true, let me clarify the terms.
On Premise
Traditionally, companies run a majority of their software, both proprietary and 3rd party, within their own data centers. Common software products that you see in corporate data centers are Microsoft Office, relational databases like Oracle, DB2, and Sysbase, and financial systems like Lawson and SAP.
Internet
Internet applications are typically web sites or proprietary applications that are built to run on a browser but are hosted within the walls of your company. Popular websites like eBay, Amazon, and Google are run from within those companies data centers. Many of the web applications that most companies built are run within their data center or by some hosting partner. Let's be clear that hosting is not in the cloud. In a hosting environment you have dedicated infrastructure assigned to your application(s) that is not shared with other companies. When you want to scale up you have to buy/lease more infrastructure and bandwidth.
Cloud Computing
With cloud computing, we are now talking about running software that is written by someone else who also manages the infrastructure. SaaS or software as a service is a prime example of this. Salesforce.com has been a leader in this space with their CRM services. You can pay to use any module and plug that module right into your environment. Mashups and services like GMail, Google Docs, Mapquest, social software like Facebook and Twitter fall into this category. How is this different then regular Internet computing? All of these products/services are open and completely programmable and the underlying infrastructure is nothing that you need to manage.
PaaS
Now comes the game changer! Major Internet presences like Google, Amazon, and Salesforce.com have built a highly reliable and scalable infrastructure platform over the years. Now they are building out excess capacity and selling it to us as a service. Now you can take your on premise and Internet applications and run them on their platform. This is a combination of hosting and SaaS but with scale and sharing. Unlike hosting, every company is sharing the same infrastructure. Now a $100M company runs on the same world class infrastructure that a $10B company runs on. There is no other way for the $100M company to justify the robustness of the infrastructure that they get with PaaS. The pricing model changes things significantly. Instead of licensing you now pay as you go. As your traffic increases, your applications have access to virtually unlimited infrastructure and you scale in real time. Good bye disaster recovery and business continuity initiatives. Your entire business continuity plan becomes running on two PaaS providers in case one goes down.
I put together this 7 minute video blog that goes into more detail for you hardcore folks out there.
So what are the main challenges that Saas needs to overcome?
Author: Michael Kavis - Contact Author Publisher: Michael Kavis Licensee Name: Michael Kavis Reference URL: http://blogs.ittoolbox.com/eai/madgreek/archives/the-future-is-in-the-clouds-25369 Copyright: All Rights Reserved Registration Date: 6/14/2008 9:56:24 PM UTC Views: 2068 |
