Sadly, these enterprise cloud predictions need to come true, but won't happen any time soon
It’s that time of year again, as PR people reach out to tell me about
their client’s 2015 cloud computing predictions. Are you sitting down?
Most revolve around whatever technology they sell. Shocker, right?
Here are three cloud computing predictions for 2015 that have no chance of coming true, though they should.
1. Enterprises finally get a good grasp on cloud computing security
Everyone
is interested in security, but they all figure it doesn't really work
in the cloud -- yet no one in enterprise IT can tell me why. The fact of
the matter is that most enterprise IT folks don’t have a good
understanding of what it means to build a secure cloud, so they default
to the “cloud computing is unsecure” reaction.
The cloud is as secure as you make it -- in the same way your enterprise systems are as secure as you make them. Ask Sony Pictures
or the other big companies that saw their names splashed across
headlines this year, as well as those that flew under the radar. None of
the big-name hacks were due to cloud security issues; my guess is the
unreported hacks took advantage of enterprise systems’ security issues
as well.
2. Cloud architectures become simpler and easier to understand
The
writing is on the wall: We’re headed for a complex, widely distributed
architecture with cloud-based systems. The thought of everything moving
from the enterprise data center to a single public cloud provider is
growing more far-fetched each week.
No single cloud provider or
single piece of cloud technology does it all. That fact will drive
complexity. Enterprises will be forced into hybrid cloud and multicloud
architectures, layers of governance technologies, layers of security
technology, and many types of coupled and decoupled cloud and noncloud
databases.
It’s already complicated, and it will get more so.
3. The cloud is determined to always be cost-effective
The
ROI on cloud computing projects ranges greatly. Sometimes, the value is
easy to define, and it comes quickly after deployment. In other cases,
cloud-based solutions end up costing more than traditional approaches,
but is not apparent until after deployment.
The trick is to run
the numbers to figure out the value that cloud computing will truly
bring to your enterprise. Factor in the cost of change, the cost of
risk, and the use of an opex model versus a capex model. The cloud
provides value most of the time, but not always.
Source: http://www.infoworld.com
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