|
|
Total Number of Subscribers: 1626 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Date:23rd July 2010 |
Compiled by: M Sathya Kumar |
|
Before companies can migrate their IT to "private" or
"public" clouds, they need a better grasp of current costs.
Unless
you've been on a very long sabbatical, you have no doubt heard about
"cloud computing" as the future of information technology. But the conversation is quickly
morphing from a discussion of "the cloud" to a potentially
confusing choice between "public clouds" and "private
clouds." Definitions
of cloud computing vary, but, until recently, most centered around the concept of moving computing functionality from
behind corporate firewalls onto the Internet. A computing task moved to the
cloud becomes a service provided by a third party in its own data center,
allowing companies to scale down their huge investments in IT hardware,
software, and staff. So
the advent of the term "private cloud" may strike you as an
oxymoron, because it keeps much of the IT action behind a company's firewall
— and much of the expense on its books. But
many companies, particularly large ones, are moving more avidly toward
private clouds than toward public ones. (Gartner forecasts that, through
2012, the top 1,000 global corporations will spend more on building private
clouds than on buying public-cloud services.) Some, in fact, may be moving
that way without even realizing it. That's
because computing clouds depend largely on the virtualization of computer
servers, which are configured to serve multiple applications, and on
sophisticated automation that shifts work among the servers as efficiently as
possible. Companies have been adopting greater virtualization for several
years. How many of them would regard this effort as building a "private
cloud" is an open question. Regardless,
by tapping the full power of virtualization, companies can create an IT
environment that offers many of the advantages of public clouds — fast and
easy application implementation, scalability of computing capacity according
to demand, pay-as-you-go pricing, and, often, lower operating costs than with
traditional IT. Private clouds may also offer better data security, which is
often cited as a major concern when companies contemplate a move to the
public cloud (see "Safe and Sound?" at the end of this article). But
before a company can opt for any of the many forms of public-cloud computing
(applications via software-as-a-service, computing capacity via infrastructure-as-a-service, or an application-development
environment via platform-as-a-service) or build its own private cloud, it
will have to determine which route offers the most savings. Unfortunately, in
this regard many companies are flying blind. "Most
companies don't have a good handle on their IT costs, so they can't
legitimately say whether they will save money by moving to the cloud,"
said David Smith, a Gartner analyst. That applies especially to very large
companies: in a report published last December, Gartner estimated that only
about 10% of the CIOs at the 2,000 largest global
companies truly understand their costs. Ric Telford, vice president of cloud
services for IBM, points out that CFOs have a key role in weighing the cost
considerations of a move to public or private clouds. That's because the CFO
is best positioned to assess the total cost of IT, including things like real
estate, power consumption, and other factors that might escape a data-center
manager's attention. John
Kogan, who headed up finance at four different
technology firms before becoming CEO of Proformative,
an online resource for finance professionals, agrees. "CFOs' lives are
going to be directly impacted by cloud computing," he says, "but
they don't know much about what public and private clouds are, or how they
differ." But
results vary widely from one company to another, and in some cases opting for
a public cloud may actually cost more. In particular, companies with large
numbers of highly virtualized servers may not gain anything from putting most
workloads into a public cloud, where the meter would be constantly running
for thousands of employees. "We have 100,000 servers, so we always have
sufficient capacity," says Diane Bryant, CIO of Intel Corp. "I have
no reason to pay for a service that I have the scale to provide
internally." Despite
its vast and efficient infrastructure, however, Intel does use some
public-cloud services for a handful of back-office tasks, like payroll and
employee expense reporting. "But there are very few of those,"
Bryant says. At
the other end of the spectrum, Asahi Kesai Spandex
America, a $70 million, independently operated subsidiary of Japanese conglomerate
Asahi Kesai, maintains its manufacturing and
warehouse systems in-house, but relies on a public-cloud service (from NetSuite) for its ERP. "It's a necessity given the
size of our company," says CFO David Stover. "I can't afford to
have an IT specialist whose sole function is to manage an SAP system." Cloud computing has huge
momentum, and plenty of genuine promise. But CFOs need to lead a careful
financial analysis before their companies rush to either shed infrastructure
in favor of a public cloud or invest in it further with the goal of creating
a private cloud (not to mention "hybrid clouds" that shift work
back and forth between public and private clouds; externally managed
private-cloud services; and other permutations of the cloud concept).
"Don't do it for the sake of doing it," says IBM's Safe and Sound? Regardless of its
cost-saving potential, cloud computing often faces an uphill battle when it
comes to concerns over data security. After all, data is flowing over a
public network. While cloud firms can get a SAS 70 certification for their
transaction-processing controls, there are not yet any widely accepted
standards specifically for certifying cloud-computing security. Still, a
recent report from Deloitte found that, "generally, the level of
computer security, data-privacy practices, and expertise of major
cloud-service providers are likely to be greater than those provided by an
in-house IT staff and systems." "Everybody
in the cloud business is working on hardening security," says Brian Ott, vice president of the worldwide cloud program at
Unisys. "Within two years, I believe it will no longer be the number-one
issue making people hesitate to go into a public cloud." Cloud computing also poses a
different sort of data-security risk: the chance that your
data may be hard to move should you switch providers. Deloitte
cautions cloud users about the danger of "lock-in," that is, having
your data managed in an operating system and associated architecture that
inhibits portability. Intel CIO Diana Bryant agrees. "Providers will
make it very easy for you to develop and run applications in their
clouds," she says, "but it may be very expensive to port it into a
different one, and they know it. The last thing you want is to have no
choice." — D.M. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Rewards
waiting for feedback at |
|
|
|
|
|
Disclaimer: We believe that the information contained in this e-zine is true. If you do not wish to receive Smart Trainee please click here. |
|
|
|
|
|
Click here to contact us, if you are unable to view the content properly |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|