|
Latest News
|
From the Blogosphere On Cloud Lock-in, Standards, Decoupling and Why SaaS Does Not Scale
How the three-tier cloud as we know it is changing
By: Gregor Petri
Jul. 26, 2010 06:33 PM
With security and legal concerns being slowly addressed by the industry, lock-in and standards are rapidly becoming the biggest concerns regarding cloud computing. If the cloud industry is to make good on its promise, these will need to somehow be addressed. Let’s examine some recent developments. Interesting to see how, just a week after my blog on “The Principles and Perils of Vendor Lock-in” *1 several vendors made announcements seemingly supporting my suggested approach. For example, after hinting at the potential benefit of decoupling SaaS and PaaS from its underlying Infrastructure (IaaS) layers, Microsoft announced it is making Azure available as a PaaS platform to several large IaaS providers *2. Now I am sure this had nothing to do with my blog on preventing lock-in and all to do with a desire in Redmond to increase market share for their PaaS platform, which ironically - if too successful – may even increase lock-in. But the move will offer customers who select Microsoft’s PaaS platform a choice of vendors for the underlying Infrastructure services (IaaS). At the same time NASA and Rackspace announced they are joining forces around an open source platform for Private Clouds called OpenStack *3. Rackspace’s initiative is no doubt as commercially motivated as Microsoft’s’. If Rackspace –in my view correctly - expects that many private clouds in the foreseeable future will start to source additional capacity (cloudburst) from public clouds, then having these private clouds be based on the same architecture as their public cloud offering will help Rackspace. NASA's motives stem from the US governments cloud stimulus approach *4 , a specific stated goal of which is “to accelerate the creation of cloud standards”. If history is to repeat itself, we can expect to first see industry standards lead to a “plug compatible cloud market”, before a serious “open standards cloud market” will take shape. As NASA is determined to have workable cloud standards a lot faster than the decade or so it took to get a man on the moon, it is understandable they see the Rackspace route as a viable shortcut. This is also understandable because agreeing on open cloud standards today would be as difficult as agreeing 3D TV standards back in the days of the black & white moon landing broadcasts. (And, reader beware, if there ever was a time to keep options open and not lock yourself into what looks to become an early standard , it would be today). A decoupled cloud Others struggled with imagining what such a decoupled cloud would look like in practice. Luckily, also last week (it was indeed an eventful week for cloud computing) a first real live example of such a decoupled offering went live. Skygone Inc. announced they were offering a choice of GIS (Geographical Information System) services *5 by aggregating solutions from several GIS software vendors across a choice of infra-structure platforms and vendors. Companies in need of such geographical information – which is a complex and specialized area, beyond the expertise and interest of most internal IT departments - can now simply source this without locking themselves into a specific vendor or platform. (Disclosure: Skygone uses as underlying platform Applogic from 3Tera, now owned by my employer CA Technologies.) Several analyst firms predicted early on that this type of “brokering of cloud services” would become an important market force. But in recent months –maybe under the influence of several self-proclaimed 100 pound gorilla’s entering the cloud market – the analyst community became very quiet about the concept, which is a shame because it also addresses the fact that in an enterprise context “SaaS does not scale”.
A better way Now it is important to understand that this approach does not in any way, shape or form resemble the old way IT used to work. Let’s use an analogy from the consumer IT market to describe the difference:
The decoupled cloud experience we are aiming for should of course feel like the second scenario. Also note how in the first example we talked mainly about technology and in the second mainly about cooking. Somehow we in IT moved from talking about what our companies do (selling soup, soap or insurance) to mainly discussing technologies (like SOA, SOAP and yes: Cloud). *1 The Principles and Perils of Vendor Lock-In *4 The US government investments in cloud computing could be seen as a modern day industry stimulus package. In my view current efforts of NASA and the like may have as deep an impact on cloud computing as the cold war DoD budgets had on the development of computer networks and the Apollo project had on technology advancement in general. *5 Skygone Inc. announced offering a choice of GIS (Geographical Information System) services *6a SAS 70 is Not Proof of Security, Privacy, or Continuity Compliance *6b Public Cloud Infrastructure Helps SaaS Vendor Economics *6c Organizations Need to Re-Evaluate the Rationale for SaaS |
Cloud Computing Blogs
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||