The move to the cloud seems to be going smoother than many expected
The rapid growth of cloud computing continues. As we implement systems,
migrate applications, and move infrastructure to the cloud, proceedings
seem to be going better than most people expected.
First, I’m thankful that, for the most part, public cloud-based
systems have done a good job of keeping outages to a minimum and
avoiding data breaches. Despite the Microsoft Azure outage last week and
a few other minor outages, public cloud providers have done a much
better job at staying up and running than IT does with most internal
enterprise systems.
Many commentators predicted widespread panic
when massive cloud outages occurred. It hasn’t happened yet. However,
according to most analysts, only 1 percent of our workloads are now in
the cloud — so the effects of outages are still small.
Second, I’m
thankful that large data breaches have not occurred at public cloud
providers — knock on wood. Data breaches, such as recent issues within
Target, Home Depot, and even the U.S. Postal Service, did not have a
cloud anywhere near them; rather, traditional systems and traditional
approaches to security caused the problems.
Cloud security, although not perfect, has not disappointed us so far. However, you have the specter of the NSA scandal and fear that data in the cloud is data the government will cull through.
Third,
I’m thankful for Amazon Web Services, a company that set the standard
and made many other public cloud providers step up their game. AWS has
led the public IaaS market, and I suspect other public cloud providers
would not have spent as much money on their clouds if AWS had not set
the pace for them to follow. AWS’s success has led to followers who
emulate it, and that in turn has led to a market that provides much
better cloud technology as a whole.
Fourth, I’m thankful that
private clouds do not have as many deployments as originally predicted.
In using private clouds, you must still maintain your own hardware and
software. Although it’s a good solution in some very specific cases, a
private cloud does not provide the value that public cloud provides.
Perhaps having figured that out, most enterprises now bypass private
clouds to move to public cloud or at least to implement hybrid clouds.
Source: http://www.infoworld.com
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