|
Recent Articles |
The Next Big Thing To Learn Is Cloud Computing Whenever you roll out a new technology, there are always changes to how people perceive that technology, and the ramifications to employment that technology has. Cloud computing is disruptive, allowing fewer people to...
IDC Revises Global IT Spending Growth In 2009 The continued decline of the global economy has led IDC to revise its forecast for worldwide IT spending in 2009. The IDC Black Book now forecasts worldwide IT...
New Study Points To Better-Paying IT Certifications An old Irish phrase that's meant to be said to friends mentions something about the sun shining on a person's face and the wind being at his back. These days...
Léo Apotheker On The State Of IT Yesterday, a very interesting and enlightening conversation between Léo Apotheker, SAP co-CEO, and Andy McAfee got aired on TV with the ever...
|
|
04.03.09
The Current IT State Of Cloud Computing
By Mike Kavis
I spent two days at the Cloud Computing Expo in NYC this past week and want to share my thoughts on the state of the cloud. Here are my thoughts in no particular order...
• Many of the vendors do not have a clear vision and are rushing to the cloud
• Microsoft's Azure is so not ready for prime time
• There are not enough practitioners out there to tell us the truth about the cloud
• There is an amazing amount of FUD going around
• People are making blanket statements that are just not true
• David Linthicum is one of the few people on the cloud computing speaking circuit who is making sense Now allow me to explain...
Vendor Confusion & Azure
Amazon, Google, Salesforce, and a host of early adopter pure players get it. But the mega vendors joining the party late (IBM, Microsoft, HP) do not. I remember being at a handful of SOA conferences last year when I mentioned the cloud and the IBM folks in the meeting almost lost their drinks through their nose. Now they are on board but they really don't have a well thought out vision and are almost interchanging the terms data centers and clouds. Their message is all over the place and they are not thought leaders in the space. Microsoft says a lot of the right things but when you ask questions it is really vapor ware. It is very proprietary and the only reason why it has so much traction is because of the brand name Microsoft. Their presentation was laughable, and the Q&A that followed exposed many weaknesses that were hidden behind the pretty power point. Until they show me something real, it is the "Blue Screen of Death" in the cloud for me.
The Power, Control and Services You Need Wrapped in the Expert Support You Want - Learn More |
Each vendor has its own definition of the cloud. Many are rebranding what they already have as cloud enabled. It is not all the vendors fault though. This is typical in the early stages of maturity once a technology starts up the hype cycle.
Where are the practitioners?
There are way too many vendors talking and not enough practitioners. That is not a good thing. If all of our education is coming from vendors we will be in a bad place. This is SOA all over again from 3-4 years ago. When I do see a practitioner, most of them have not done anything significant yet. If I have to listen to the NY Times success story one more time I will puke. I keep hearing the same case studies over and over which tells me that we are talking about the cloud a heck of a lot more than we are doing the cloud. Most of the good case studies are from startups which is an obvious sweet spot for the cloud. I haven't heard many case studies where an established enterprise built something significant in the cloud.
FUD, FUD, and more FUD and "Blanket Statements"
As expected with anything that requires change, there is a ton of fear, uncertainty, and doubt out there. Here are a few quotes I heard from practitioners (of all people)
Continue reading this article.
About the Author:
Mike Kavis is a veteran Chief Architect with over 23 years of IT experience including distributed computing, SOA, BPM, data warehouse, business intelligence, and enterprise architecture. Read Mike's blog at Enterprise Initiatives.
|