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Robert McGarvey

And Before You Know It... Clouds Are Status Quo

Written by Robert McGarvey
11/5/2009 10 comments
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The cloud revolution is here. You just don’t know it.

We hear that cloud computing adoption has proceeded more slowly than anticipated, with security concerns usually cited as the chief roadblock -- but, as I write this, I realize how much the cloud has already pervaded my computing life.

I personally back up all my data to Amazon Web Services LLC ’s cloud; all my email routes through the Gmail cloud; and increasingly, I do more and more work in the Google Apps cloud.

And I am not alone. Tens of thousands of people -- and businesses -- are doing much the same, routinely using cloud services for mission-critical tasks ranging from maintaining CRM databases on Salesforce.com Inc. to maintaining bookkeeping records in Intuit Inc. (Nasdaq: INTU)’s cloud.

“Most companies have data in the cloud, whether they realize it or not, whether it's online tax filing software, or online access to a company's bank accounts, or the use of online credit card processing services. The cloud has been growing invisibly for years,“ says Patrick Fetterman, vice president of marketing at Plex Systems, an ERP software developer in Auburn, Mich.

I just stumbled on a wildly provocative comment from Eric Schmidt, Google’s CEO, who a week ago told a Utah gathering of technology executives that cloud computing is more important than the advent of the personal computer.

Read that again: more important than the birth of the PC.

The reason is simple: Cloud computing provides any one of us with access to dramatically scalable computing resources, priced on a pay-as-you-go model. Indeed, as Schmidt suggests, that is a rule changer.

And we may already be there.

“Yes, we are,” says Joe Cooper, co-founder of Mountain View, Calif., cloud provider Virtualmin. He adds that cloud computing “is reliable, redundant, perpetual, searchable, expandable, shareable, and, perhaps most importantly, available everywhere.”

OK, he’s a vendor, but put that way, cloud computing is hard to resist -- which is why we aren’t doing that.

Cloud computing has a winning edge: invisible ubiquity. In most instances, it is cheaper. Certainly, it also is flexible. But at day’s end, what the cloud has that nothing else does is the ability to access it from anywhere, oftentimes using just about anything, from a smartphone to a fully configured desktop computer.

Right now, it’s mainly small companies leading the charge into cloud computing, typically because they have both fewer dollars on hand and much less invested in legacy IT infrastructure.

At Vuzit, a Philadelphia-based document control company, Cristina Martin Greysman, executive vice president for business development, relates that her company heavily depends on a medley of cloud services, including Amazon Web Services, Salesforce.com, Yammer, Fogbugz, and Gmail. Ask her why and this is her blunt response: “We could not run our business as efficiently as we do if we had to install all these applications and manage them in house. It would be resource and cost prohibitive.”

When asked to estimate how big Vuzit’s savings using the cloud are, Greysman hesitated, then said she could not possibly guess because the costs involved in setting up everything in house would simply be beyond Vuzit’s capabilities.

Exactly that thinking is heard from growing numbers of small and mid-sized company executives, just as there is acknowledgement among cloud purveyors that, so far, the Fortune 1000 has been hanging back from large-scale implementations. But that just may change sooner rather than later.

Efficiency rules, and cloud computing is just more efficient. That’s why it is winning -- why, in fact, it has already won.

Of course, there are foot-draggers who resist knowingly moving all their data into the cloud (even though much of it already has moved up there).

Bottom line? Embrace the cloud because it's already moved in.

— Robert McGarvey is a widely published author and expert on social media.

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DHagar
Thinkernetter
Friday November 6, 2009 5:38:29 PM
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I agree, mhhfive.  I think not only the netbook and thin-client evolution, but also the increased wireless use will shift more and more communications and data into the networking model.

I believe that networked communications and data will become the new standards much more so than the PC. 

Not only are small companies finding it's value, but new applications are being developed on cloud computing with even large companies.

I think its time is coming as well.

DHagar

mhhfive
IQ Crew
Friday November 6, 2009 1:30:10 PM
no ratings

Hmm.  Just because it hasn't happened yet doesn't mean it won't... 

I see kids playing "cloud games" like Club Penguin.. ALL. THE. TIME.  So there's evidence that the next generation of computer users are being trained to use networked computing. 

Netbooks are just a stepping stone towards almost all computers becoming "not-so--thin clients".... 

nathanwosnack
IQ Crew
Friday November 6, 2009 11:25:55 AM
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JD,

At work, the concept of Networked or Virtualized WorkStations makes sense -- but at home it never will...

Why not? Be careful not to be too pessimistic. Sure people don't "get" computer security, but look at how well users have adapted to other forms of computing; advancements in online gaming, online shopping, VoIP, and more. Sure the end-users are a pain in the behind for support, they often break things and they remind me of those ever-popular AOL'ers from 1990's newsgroups, but what's to say they won't understand Networked for Virtualized WorkStations?

Optimistic (and perhaps naïve),

Nathan Wosnack

J DAmbrosio
Rank: Cyborg
Friday November 6, 2009 9:59:14 AM

mh25,

It hasn't happened in the 10-15 yrs. since he first mentioned it and it isn't going to happen ANY time soon if EVER.

Believe it or not a vast, vast majority of PC Users have little to no need for external networking, the internet, etc. at all.

At work, the concept of Networked or Virtualized WorkStations makes sense -- but at home it never will...

 

JD

 

J DAmbrosio
Rank: Cyborg
Friday November 6, 2009 9:54:05 AM

Mary's right bwelford, no self-respecting IT Professional I know would come up with such a lame, market-speak term such as "Cloud Computing"...

Something along the lines of "Virtualized Web-centric Resource Allocation" or VWRA for those who love those meaningless acronyms would have been not only more appropriate but more likely to come from the true IT crowd!!

 

I'm just saying,

 

JD

 

mhhfive
IQ Crew
Thursday November 5, 2009 8:13:00 PM

Part of the reason why the "cloud" will be be bigger than the PC revolution -- is that PCs will ultimately be cloud-based, too.  Larry Ellison used to say that "networked PCs" were the future, and he was apparently just a couple decades too early to be considered prescient. 

Google may also be trying to bring this "cloud PC" to fruition with its Chrome OS -- which may attack the Windows empire by minimizing the importance of the local OS and shifting the functionality of computing to remote datacenters... 

 

 

Michael P. Kassner
Thinkernetter
Thursday November 5, 2009 7:35:21 PM

My question is simply do you trust them?

Mary Jander
Thinkernetter
Thursday November 5, 2009 5:45:37 PM

Bwelford, are you sure it was the technocrats? I always got the impression it WAS the marketers who named cloud computing. It has that unreal kind of PowerPointy connotation.

I thought the technologists would have made terms more exact and better defined, if more pompous.

bwelford
IQ Crew
Thursday November 5, 2009 4:57:22 PM

Unfortunately this huge technological innovation was named by the technocrats without much marketing input.  Up in the clouds is the context I guess but it does not convey the immense power of this approach.

I'm very firmly involved with 'cloud computing' using Salesforce.com and all the Google docs, not forgetting Gmail. Perhaps the most telling argument is the minimal 'interface device' you will need as we progress.  Using speech technology it will be unstoppable.

... and yet it still has this cloudy tag.  If only they had labeled it 'space computing'.  That has only positive associations.  Ah well, I guess it's too late now.

DavidSilversmith
Thinkernetter
Thursday November 5, 2009 3:03:10 PM

There are still issues with cloud computing (Security) just like there are issues with desktop computing.  However, it is funny to hear IT folks who are still opposing the trends which, as you point out so well, is already the status quo.

Computing in the cloud is not perfect - but it's hear to stay (until the next wave comes to pass it by).

The ThinkerNet does not reflect the views of TechWeb. The ThinkerNet is an informal means of communication to members and visitors of the Internet Evolution site. Individual authors are chosen by Internet Evolution to blog. Neither Internet Evolution nor TechWeb assume responsibility for comments, claims, or opinions made by authors and ThinkerNet bloggers. They are no substitute for your own research and should not be relied upon for trading or any other purpose.
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