Cloud computing has the potential to reshape IT provision over the coming
decade. The concept of renting applications, development platforms, processing
power, storage or any other web-enabled service marks a sea change in the
approach to enterprise IT. It is an approach that places the internet at the
heart of the organisation.
But despite blockbuster-levels of hype, there is still a marked degree of
confusion over cloud computing, not least over what it actually entails. There
are multiple and sometimes contradictory definitions used to describe cloud
computing. These encompass everything from defining it as an updated version of
utility computing to categorising the cloud as anything consumed outside the
corporate firewall, which could even include conventional outsourcing
arrangements.
IT advisory group Gartner defines cloud
computing as a style of computing in which massively scalable IT-enabled
capabilities are delivered as a service to multiple customers using internet
technologies. And although the hype surrounding cloud computing is off the
scale, it has the potential to provide businesses with a compelling alternative
model of IT delivery, says Joe Skorupa, research vice president at Gartner.
“The promise of cloud computing is ubiquitous access to a broad set of
applications and services, which are delivered over the internet and related
networks to multiple customers,” he says. “Cloud exists when someone takes
responsibility for the delivery of a service or a resource over the internet.
And the cloud isn’t just about the big guys it could be a small guy using the
big guy’s cloud to deliver their own applications.”
Although the term cloud computing is comparatively new, many of the
underlying technologies from web acceleration to virtualisation are
relatively mature and increasingly battle-hardened. How these components are
assembled into a business-ready service and which approaches will emerge
successfully is less clear.
To date, cloud pace-setters such as Amazon, Google, Yahoo and Microsoft have
taken the concepts of grid and utility computing, virtualisation and
next-generation datacentres to be the cornerstones of delivering cloud services.
Examples such as Amazon’s Simple Storage
Service (S3) or Google’s Apps service provide a glimpse of what cloud
computing may look like, but neither has yet achieved the degree of reliability
to be considered enterprise-ready.
Back to basics
Nevertheless, these pioneers provide a window to a new world of computing,
says Vuk Trifkovic, senior analyst at Datamonitor. He believes that cloud
computing could make IBM’s much-ridiculed 1943 prediction that the world may
only need five computers seem surprisingly prescient. “Look at Microsoft,
Oracle, Google every company with aspirations for cloud computing is now
significantly bulking up its datacentre,” he says. “Cloud computing isn’t going
to have one shape or form, but will offer different levels of service depending
on customer needs.”
While there is a lot of marketing hype around cloud computing, Bill Sexton,
chief information officer (CIO) at
British Gas
Services, is adamant this is not just another fad.
“I predict that within five years the way we run our corporate IT will be
significantly different,” he says. “In the future it will not matter where the
software lives, and in my view if you still have it on site you’ll be throwing
money away because you’ll be putting half of your resources into supporting the
infrastructure. It’s not the infrastructure that matters it’s the
applications.”
Hosting is a core requirement of the cloud computing model. This is not a new
idea, but its significance is that it removes the overhead typically associated
with managing IT infrastructure.
Four years ago when Justoffbase, an
internet supplier of engineering tools and equipment, realised that its
enterprise resource planning (ERP) applications were approaching the end of
their life, it scoured the market for replacement systems. As Tim James-Parker,
a partner at the company, explains, the logical solution for the business was to
look for a hosted internet-based application. It opted for NetSuite.
“We use this application like you would use an online bank account,” he says.
“NetSuite handles all the maintenance, guaranteeing uptime and the use of the
latest technology. I also took the view that NetSuite was probably better at
looking after our data than we were, because it’s their business. Also when you
have thousands of users sharing the same service, if there is ever a problem it
will be sorted out fast.”
As well as removing some of the day-to-day IT operation away from the
company, Justoffbase also experienced an immediate 30 per cent increase in
business following the move to NetSuite. James-Parker attributes this to the
automating of routine processes and integrating company-wide operations.
While the introduction of cloud computing can remove some of the difficulties
associated with owning and operating all aspects of IT, it introduces new
problems for CIOs to consider. While the public internet is the simplest choice
for delivering cloud-based services it lacks end-to-end quality of service (QoS)
and is subject to routing whims and variable levels of performance.
Some of these disadvantages can be overcome by the use of optimised internet
overlay or web-accelerant technologies, such as
Citrix
NetScaler or
F5’s
WebAccelerator, in the cloud provider’s datacentre. However, the optimised
internet overlay technology will add significantly to the cost and may make it
more difficult for organisations to move between cloud providers. Nevertheless,
for business-critical applications where consistent response time and high
availability are required it will be essential.
QoS is set to become a defining metric for cloud-based suppliers, predicts
Gartner. By 2013, cloud QoS guarantees will be the primary decision criteria for
90 per cent of services used by IT organisations, says the analyst.
And QoS concerns are likely to mean that cloud computing is adopted more
readily by smaller businesses where agility is highly prized than by larger,
more cautious enterprises and where legacy systems are more deeply entrenched.
“British Gas Services has a lot of intellectual property tied up in legacy
processes and systems, and therefore assets, so we will not be switching
overnight,” says Sexton. “However, speed to market is also important and having
a solution ready to switch on in four months rather than the 12 months it would
take for a traditional solution is compelling. The cost profile is also
different, with no large capital outlay.”
XChange Business, a currency trader
with 220 high street bureau de change franchises, has adopted a hosted,
grid-based system from Corporate Modelling. The system is built on a Microsoft
architecture. The initial investment was less than a fifth of a conventional
in-house system, says Norman Mitchell, the company’s IT director.
Understandably, he is delighted. “It provides us with everything we were
looking for cloud computing is the right technology for us. The system is
resilient, looked after and it’s a brilliant service for the amount of money we
pay,” he says.
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