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Cloud Computing Expo Cloud Factors: Cost, Complexity, and Compliance
An exclusive Q&A with SAS 70 Solutions Douglas Barbin
By: Elizabeth White
May. 19, 2010 06:00 PM
"I think that with conferences like this [Cloud Expo] vendors are coming out with real service offerings with pricing and contracts (vs. pie-in-the-sky concepts that were being thrown around a year ago)," so noted Douglas Barbin , Director at SAS 70 Solutions, in this post-show Q&A with Cloud Expo Chair Jeremy Geelan. Barbin also noted that cloud computing is experiencing an evolution, not a revolution, as companies are now saying their "‘enterprise uses an IaaS provider or Software-as-a-Service, etc.'" Explore Cloud Expo Sponsorship & Exhibit Opportunities !
Cloud Computing Journal: A very general question first, about Cloud Computing itself: Surely we've heard all of this before in various forms and guises - grid computing / utility computing, etc.? What is different this time - why is everyone so convinced it will now work? Douglas Barbin: I think that with conferences like this [Cloud Expo] vendors are coming out with real service offerings with pricing and contracts (vs. pie-in-the-sky concepts that were being thrown around a year ago). Cloud Computing Journal: What are the three main factors driving CIOs toward the Cloud? Barbin: (1) Cost; (2) complexity (not being able to manage the systems/applications in-house) - related to cost; and (3) compliance/security. I know this is contrary to what the security experts will tell you, but a down-to-earth enterprise CIO will know that with his/her limited resources, he/she can only do so much to protect the systems and data and, like it or not, needs to leverage his outsourced providers. (It also gives him/her someone (else) to blame if things go wrong...) Cloud Computing Journal: And what are the three main barriers preventing some CIOs from moving some of the on-premise computing to the Cloud? Barbin: (1) Security/compliance - the vast majority of writing out there tells CIOs to fear the cloud. A lot of this is FUD and most can be handled through good due diligence (selecting the right firm, confirming that they have the necessary controls in place, etc.). (2) Plain cultural - "We don't outsource" and "no one can do it better" are still messages that come down from many CEOs. Cloud Computing Journal: How does your own company's offering/s assist CIOs and organizations/companies? Barbin: We are the auditors that come into a cloud provider and assess their IT and operations so they can provide an independent report to their customers that they are doing what they say they are doing. Cloud Computing Journal: Are there other players in the Cloud ecosystem offering the same - or is your company unique? Why? Barbin: There are to an extent. The big CPA firms offer service provider audits (called a SAS 70 / SSAE 16 audits). The security consulting and product companies offer Payment Card Industry (PCI) security assessments. We are one of a very few that offer both. More important, we don't offer all of the other services and products from tax to antivirus software, making us arguably one of the most focused providers of cloud assessments in the market. Cloud Computing Journal: We hear talk of a Cloud Revolution and also of a Cloud "evolution" - either way, what kind of time span are we talking about, do you think. In other words, for how long is Cloud Computing going to exert its pull on the minds, hearts, and budgets of all involved in modern-day Enterprise IT? Barbin: I vote for evolution. I think it will capture the most this year and (hopefully) continue to evolve into something more real in the coming years. The evidence of this is the mere fact that people aren't saying "we outsource to the cloud"; they're saying "our enterprise uses an IaaS provider or Software-as-a-Service, etc. The mere fact that we're getting more specific is evolution IMO.
A Rock Star Faculty, Top Keynotes, Sessions, and Top Delegates! The growth and success of Cloud Computing will be on display at the upcoming Cloud Expo conferences and exhibitions in Prague June 21-22 and Santa Clara November 1-4. The recent Cloud Expo at the Javits Center in New York City was the largest Cloud Computing conference ever produced, more sponsors, exhibitors and delegates than all other Cloud events of the year combined!
All main layers of the Cloud ecosystem will be represented in the6th and 7th International Cloud Expo - the infrastructure players, the platform providers, and those offering applications, and they'll all be here to speak, sponsor, exhibit and network. "Cloud Expo was announced on February 24, 2007, the day the term ‘cloud computing' was coined," said Fuat Kircaali, founder and chairman of SYS-CON Events, Inc. "Cloud has become synonymous with ‘computing' and ‘software' in two short years, and this event has become the new PC Expo, Comdex, and InternetWorld of our decade. By 2012, more than 50,000 delegates per year will be attending Cloud Expo."
Sponsorship Opportunities Early Bird Registration Options About SYS-CON Media & Events Cloud Expo, Cloud Expo East, Cloud Expo West, Cloud Expo Silicon Valley, Cloud Expo Europe, Cloud Expo Tokyo, Cloud Expo Prague, Cloud Expo Hong Kong, Cloud Expo Sao Paolo are trademarks and /or registered trademarks (USPTO serial number 85009040) of Cloud Expo, Inc. Reader Feedback: Page 1 of 1
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