Enterprise SmartsDebating the Merits of Cloud ComputingBy Renee Oricchio
Once upon a time, the formula was simple: The more computing power needed to get a job done, the more powerful the computer required. The history of computing is benchmarked by great leaps in the development of RAM and the speed of the latest microchips. “In the old days, if you wanted a very powerful computer, then you bought a supercomputer like a mainframe from Cray,” says Frank Scavo, president of Computer Economics, in Irvine, Calif. By the 1990s, with the arrival of more sophisticated microchips (like Intel’s Pentium line), combined with the growing complexity of operating systems, individual users soon took for granted the ability to run multiple applications from their individual desktops. Users who wanted to run more applications simultaneously or newer and more complicated programs from the desktop knew what to do: Just upgrade the PC. And then along came Google. Although Google didn’t invent cloud computing, it was the first to build its company from the ground up on the concept and on such a grand scale. How does Google do it? That’s a fraction of what Google does, and it’s not generated from a room full of mainframes at its corporate headquarters in Silicon Valley. Since its inception in 1998, Google has spent billions of dollars each year on hardware for its “cloud.” Most of that hardware comprises cheap, everyday PCs and servers not much more powerful than the one being used right now to display this article. All those PCs and servers now number into the hundreds of thousands. In fact, some industry estimates put the Google cloud past a cool million low-end boxes, all whirring away to keep up with the dynamic changes of content on the Internet. For Google, the cloud is not only its infrastructure. It’s the business itself generating paying subscribers for services as well as billions of eyeballs worldwide to view and click on those Google ads. Build it or borrow it? Even the largest companies aren’t likely to build their own, outside the obvious major technology players like IBM, Dell, and more recently, HP -- all of which have made heavy commitments to building out their own cloud both to use internally and to “monetize.” “Where you see organizations building their own are the large information enterprises, like credit bureaus. Visa and Mastercard use cloud computing. They can’t afford to be down,” says Scavo. Given that most enterprises will use an outside cloud computing provider, here’s a rundown of the benefits:
Despite the selling points, cloud computing still hasn’t hit critical mass yet. Analysts like Reichman predict that the tipping point will come within a couple of years and that it will be especially attractive to CIOs at the enterprise level. “We’ll start to see some vertical focus,” says Reichman. “They’ll be more industry specific and with higher levels of security and higher levels of applications.” With all those applications destined for the clouds, the question is: What will IT managers and their staff do within the organization? “Over the longer period, just like businesses don’t run their own power plants, this will be the death of the corporate IT department as we know it,” predicts Scavo. “It may take 20 to 30 years, but that’s where it’s going. An IT professional starting out would want to focus on the business side -- processes, project management and business intelligence.” Renee Oricchio is a freelance writer in Norwalk, Conn. For the past 20 years, she has been writing and producing news segments about technology and business for CNN, MSNBC, Ziff Davis, CNET and a variety of Silicon Valley-based local news outlets. |
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