| By John Treadway | Article Rating: |
|
| June 8, 2009 11:00 PM EDT | Reads: |
3,282 |
Steve Hamm (@stevehamm31) of BusinessWeek - pictured below -got a big article on #cloudcomputing into last week’s issue. It rightly points out that cloud computing is the big thing and will keep us busy for the next 10 years. Unfortunately, a lot of the article is misleading or missing key context.
His first example cited is Avon’s use of a smartphone- and PC-accessible system for connecting Avon’s 150,000 “sales leaders” with their reps (sales leaders are the consultants who recruit and run other consultants/reps and get a cut of the “upline” commission). Nothing in the article explains how this is a “cloud computing” solution. Remote/mobile accessible applications have been around almost as long as the Internet. The article doesn’t say, but I suspect that the system serving up all this info is a traditionally developed and deployed one sitting inside the Avon firewall - making it a NOT CLOUD application. But I don’t know for sure because the article doesn’t say.
Hamm then goes on to parrot the ridiculous Gartner numbers I’ve discussed previously.
His next example is
Blue Cross of Northeastern Pennsylvania, which has started using a cloud computing system to let its 300,000 members find medical histories and claims information with their mobile phones.
Again, another mobile app but no qualification on the cloud. Is it running in an IaaS framework from Amazon or Rackspace? Is it built on a PaaS environment like Force.com or QuickBase? Are these SaaS applications hosted in an elastically scalable environment? At this point, we don’t know.
Then we get treated to a total non-sequitor in the form of a note on the opportunities for chipmakers and handset manufacturers.
The shortcomings spell opportunity for plenty of companies in tech. Chipmakers such as Qualcomm (QCOM) and Intel (INTL) are creating products for portables that pack more capability on a single slice of silicon while reducing power consumption, making it easier to access information in the cloud from anywhere. Mobile-phone makers including Nokia (NOK) and Research in Motion (RIMM) are racing to come out with products aimed at business users that have all the ease-of-use of the iPhone (AAPL).
What the heck does this have to do with Cloud Computing? I’ll tell you - not much.
Okay, so here’s my favorite totally random observation in Hamm’s article.
One of the most promising aspects of cloud computing is that it enables the creation of so-called virtual personal assistants. These software confections know people’s interests and needs and go off and do useful things for them on the Internet, like suggesting a restaurant for a client meeting or offering reminders of where you have taken the client before. With GPS in smartphones, computing systems know where we are. And with artificial intelligence software, computers can be taught what we expect of them and how to anticipate our needs.
The Internet enables fun apps that can do things for you. What’s that have to do with what industry people generally consider to be cloud computing (IaaS, PaaS and SaaS)? Again, very little. You can deliver this functionality in a traditional in-house data center running on dedicated hardware and it ain’t the cloud. This is AI, not cloud computing. Or AI + mobile + location services… but it’s not necessarily running in a cloud environment.
Read the original blog entry...
Published June 8, 2009 Reads 3,282
Copyright © 2009 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
More Stories By John Treadway
John Treadway is he Director, Cloud Computing Portfolio at Unisys. He's a senior enterprise technology marketing and business development executive with significant experience across horizontal IT and financial technology markets. John has founded or co-founded three companies and currently consults to a variety of technology businesses on marketing, strategy and cloud computing opportunities. Sites/Blogs CloudBzz
- Qt DevDays 2009 - Munich
- The Power of Google and the Promise of Cloud Computing
- Unlocking the Cloud with Enterprise Private PaaS
- Big Data Kills 30-Year-Old Market
- Securing the Cloud and Establishing a Level of Trust
- ExaGrid Sets New Standard in Backup Price, Performance and Capacity with Launch of EX10000E Disk Backup System with Data Deduplication and Expanded 100TB GRID Capacity
- Cloud Computing: Transformative Technology With Financial Benefits
- The Enterprise Private Cloud - From Infrastructure to Applications
- Moving HPC Apps to the Cloud: The Practitioner's Perspective
- Business Service Management: Aligning Business & IT
- IGEL and Quest Software Advance Virtual Desktop Management by Integrating Quest vWorkspace into IGEL Universal Desktops
- World's First 16GB, 2 Virtual Rank Memory Module
- Is Microsoft as Free as Open Source?
- IBM’s Linux-Based ‘Cloud-in-a-Box’ Makes its First Sale
- United Planet offers practical portal building tips for SMBs
- Qt DevDays 2009 - Munich
- The Power of Google and the Promise of Cloud Computing
- Developing APIs for the Cloud
- Unlocking the Cloud with Enterprise Private PaaS
- Testing the Limits with Jack Margo SVP of Developer Shed, (part 1)
- The Bunker achieves PCI DSS Compliance
- Big Data Kills 30-Year-Old Market
- Securing the Cloud and Establishing a Level of Trust
- Excuse Me But Is That a Gazebo On Your Site?!
- The Top 250 Players in the Cloud Computing Ecosystem
- Red Hat Named "Platinum Sponsor" of Virtualization Conference & Expo
- An Introduction to Ant
- Google Web Toolkit: Finally Java Has Been Put into JavaScript!
- AJAX World RIA Conference News - AJAX & RIA with Server-Side JavaScript
- Python Creator Guido van Rossum to Present the Next-Generation Python 3000
- White Paper: "Extended Validation SSL Certificates"
- CEO of Hyperic, Javier Soltero on SYS-CON.TV
- Rating JRuby, Jython, and Groovy on the Java Platform
- Perforce Software Delivers State-of-the-Art Application Lifecycle Management
- TurboGears - Python-Based Framework for AJAX Web Development
- iPhone 3G Only Looks Cheaper





























