Cloud computing: Which IT projects are right for the cloud?
- 24 November, 2009 05:44
- Comments 1
Cloud computing is poised to win the title of most popular, and populist, buzzword of 2009.
It certainly is gaining traction outside of IT. In fact, the idea of cloud computing has become so popular that executives and employees who don't even work in the IT department are starting to ask for it by name.
Budget-minded CEOs are telling IT managers to look into cloud computing to reduce the amount of expensive hardware running their data centers; CFOs are interested because they've heard the model can slash costs associated with new IT projects; tech-savvy employees are asking for it because they think it sounds cool.
To be clear, the actual number of corporations that have deployed cloud computing remains small; the Corporate Executive Board's Infrastructure Executive Council doesn't expect to see mainstream adoption -- meaning at least 50 per cent of corporations have embraced cloud computing -- until 2012. And even then, they believe companies will only use some of the services that fall under the cloud computing umbrella.
Still, IT departments large and small feel obligated to at least look into cloud computing's potential to save money, reduce overhead and increase efficiency and flexibility.
What's more, those IT shops that drag their feet might find overeager users are beating them to the cloud, warns James Staten, an analyst at Forrester Research Inc. For example, "application developers are using the cloud and not telling IT," he says. To avoid being caught unaware, IT should take the lead in deciding what goes into the cloud and determining how to get it there, says Staten.
Emerging best practices
In a report published in September, Forrester Research outlined the following best practices for cloud computing:
* Conduct functional and scalability testing and development work.
* Deploy short-lived and highly volatile Web applications.
* Run quick, grid-type high-performance computing analysis.
But where to start? What's the best way for an IT manager to determine whether his company's corporate culture is suited for shipping computing tasks to Web-based third parties? What expectations should service providers be required to meet? How should the success -- or failure -- of a cloud computing project be measured?
These are not questions to be taken lightly, since the success or failure of a company's foray into the cloud will influence corporate perceptions of the model going forward. Computerworld gathered advice from tech execs, analysts and experts on how IT managers should go about determining which of their corporations' applications, tasks or services are best suited for the cloud.
Pick a project -- the right project
The Corporate Executive Board, a research and membership organization designed to support the functions surrounding CEOs, has studied corporate adoption of cloud computing through its Infrastructure Executive Council and its Data Center Operations Council, both of which are headed by practice manager Mark Tonsetic.
Tonsetic's advice to IT managers: Find a project that supports a business opportunity and could be easily moved into the cloud to save costs and resources -- but it should be something that doesn't involve core competencies, and moving it offsite shouldn't create a security risk. In other words, find a project where moving some or all functions to the cloud would improve the bottom line but the company wouldn't face disaster if security or availability was compromised.
Tonsetic isn't alone in advising companies to tread lightly into the cloud. That's because there's plenty for IT departments to lose sleep over with cloud computing, such as the security risks created when companies move sensitive information beyond the limits of their own data centers. And -- as proven by a number of recent high-profile outages of cloud services provided by Google Inc., Microsoft Corp. and others -- availability is a real concern.
At The Scooter Store, maker of scooters and power chairs for people with limited mobility based in New Braunfels, Texas, Senior Vice President of IT Jay Greene has replaced the Excel spreadsheets that the remote sales representatives used to store contacts with a cloud-based customer relationship management application from Salesforce.com Inc.
Greene's staff has also worked with the company's legal department to launch a cloud-based document-tracking application that users can share with outside attorneys, and The Scooter Store's training department uses a cloud-based application to keep employee training records.
None of these projects are mission-critical or time-sensitive, involve highly confidential information, or need to be integrated with systems running in the internal data center, Greene says, making them good fits for cloud computing.
And that's as it should be, says Forrester's Staten. "Look at your portfolio of applications and services and decide which are commodities, not core competencies," he advises. "Those are your candidates for cloud."
While Greene has had positive experiences with his cloud computing projects so far, he's not ready to move established, mission-critical applications out of his data center. "We're at a maturity level that we've got our functionality built in-house, in a secure manner that's compliant and protects information," he says.
"If we were a startup, it might be more logical to consider" moving mission-critical functions to the cloud, Greene says. "You could run your business out of the cloud, you just have to be careful."
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Comments
Mike
One of the main issues is an accepted definition of what cloud computing is. From my observations and reading I would venture the following.
As I understand it Cloud computing comprises of three distinct components;
1. The high speed always available, Internet
2. Multi point (or distributed) Applications
3. An elastic Infrastructure ( Like Lycra pants, they always fit)
Grid computing as promised by major vendors, was to enable the linking of mainframes/servers with essentially dumb clients to centralize processing and storage, and was thus a component of one and two above. This was initially on dedicated hard connections and really was a combination of applications and storage, with usually ownership of apps and storage being with the same vendor.
However, the difference with the Cloud is the ownership of the disparate parts and the application of elasticity to the equation, via the ubiquity of the high speed Internet. The Cloud addresses the sort of problems that, as an example plagues public transport systems; one of matching capacity with demand at any particular point in time. In order to cater for peak hour demand – the rush hour – transit systems typically have to own a greater number of buses, trains, etc than they actually need for their overall 24 hour traffic load; they can scale up, but don’t have elasticity to manage demand any other way. Ideally their infrastructure would run at 100% capacity over a full 24 hour period. This however is not practical, hence overcapacity/underutilization of their investment leading to an increased fixed capital base that has to be paid for by the public and amortized to recoup costs. Cloud Computing is analogous to solving this problem. Thera ra many issues, not the least of which are legal, that have to be solved
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