The speed at which Cloud computing has planted its feet firmly in
the center stage of the IT and Communications world is quite
interesting. It's not a technology play - in fact I would be hard
pushed to identify a single piece of new technology that is fundamental
to cloud. And unlike Twitter or Facebook it's not a social-psychology
phenomenom in any real sense - there is no "man-in-the-street' movement
that is driving the uptake or need for cloud computing. It is one of
those rare beasts - a practical, common-sense driven initiative.
Putting it simply, cloud computing makes much more efficient use of
resources. In the early stages these resources are essentially
processing power and storage, but increasingly the focus of cloud will
converge on efficient use of software resources from a bewildering
array of sources. The concept of a user being able to gain access to
and pay for these resources on a per-use basis makes great economic
sense for everyone from the lone mobile game developer in his garage,
to the uber-large scale financial institution. It also happens to be
industry changing. Unless someone spots a fatal flaw with the concept,
over the next ten years we will move from a predominantly distributed
computing and storage world, to a centralised computing and storage
world. Conspiracy theorists and thriller writers may make hay from
this global IT shift, but I don't see fear stopping this happen.
Major investment in new levels of security are inevitable, and I do
predict that cloud's road to success will hit the odd pothole around
the area of security, but I don't see this stopping the party.
What makes cloud so interesting is that every one of the global
vertical industries (Telecoms, Financials, Retail, etc) has to have two
conversations about the cloud - firstly how do we become a cloud user
to enable more efficient operations; secondly, how do we leverage our
existing platform assets to become a cloud provider. Telco's in
particular are questioning how do they shift their own business models
to allow them to emerge as one of the winners in the new cloud world.
They are looking at everything from opening up their own data centers
to host other third parties, to (more realistically I believe) opening
up their own 'crown jewel' applications such as billing and service
management applications.
So if you are not yet discussing cloud in your business, now is the time to start.
Posted
11-27-2009 2:16 PM
by
Martin Creaner