Early Bird Savings at Cloud Expo
(September 12, 2008) - Originally, Cloud Computing was a vague term for a
very vague and distant future in which computing would occur in a few remote
locations without the need for very much human intervention. Infinite
computing resources would be available for any need at costs approaching
zero. Certainly, users would not need to know or care about how the
computers, their software, or the network functioned.
In the real world, physical computing progressed differently. We cycled
between periods when computing was more centralized (and seemed more remote
and less accessible to users) and other periods when computing was right on
user desktops. No one was ever satisfied. Centralized computing failed to
give users enough control and was... (more)
This week I spent several days at the Uptime Institute's Symposium 2009, a
conference where facilities management meets IT. The focus for this year's
conference was onGreen. I spoke several times, moderatig a panel on
outsourcing versus cloud computing, and giving a mini-keynote on SaaS and
Cloud Computing.
At that conference, McKinsey announced a report on Cloud computing, claiming
th... (more)
For a company born out of a headline-grabbing clash of wills between two
industry titans - one practically beloved by his users, the other, well, not
so much - a company set up to pioneer the latest disruptive distribution
scheme, a model likely to change the face of the software industry forever,
and use chi-chi infrastructure like Linux, Java, MySQL and Tomcat, PeopleSoft
founder Dave ... (more)