| By Ernest de Leon | Article Rating: |
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| December 27, 2009 01:00 AM EST | Reads: |
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4th International Cloud Computing Expo attracted more than 50 sponsors and exhibitors and expo floor was visited by more than 2,250 delegates in Santa Clara, CA
The first part of the vSphere strategy, internal cloud, is defined as the private cloud. This is where you have total control of all resources and information and everything resides within your own data center. The second part, federation, is defined as a hybrid cloud. Here, you use your private cloud until you reach the capacity limit. Then you can federate or ‘burst up’ to the public cloud to use resources beyond your capacity as needed. You will have to be extra careful that the resources you allow to be federated to the public cloud do not pose a threat if they are exposed or data is compromised. I am not saying that it will happen, as Google and Amazon have high levels of security of their own accord, but it is a matter of risk management for your business. If this is an acceptable level of risk, then by all means take advantage of federated services.
So now that we have defined the cloud a little better, how to we derive the value from the platform. I love to use military terms when defining IT initiatives because they seem to illustrate points better. Tactical missions are those that solve a short term problem. Strategic missions are those that solve long term problems. Because of the high cost of implementing cloud computing (meaning application migration costs,) you should ensure that you are using cloud computing as a strategy rather than a tactical solution. While cloud computing can definitely help you overcome tactical challenges within your organization, the strategic goals of the business are much easier to line up with the platform in terms of TOC and ROI. Building a flexible, robust and scalable infrastructure to deliver services (applications in this sense) to your end users is a strategic value. Within that strategy, smaller tactical issues can be addressed as needed. The fact that you can pool resources and allocate them as needed allows you to address both the tactical and strategic goals of your organization. Please be sure, however, that you do not simply try to address tactical issues without being mindful of the overall strategy.
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Published December 27, 2009 Reads 10,169
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More Stories By Ernest de Leon
Ernest is a technologist, a futurist and serial entrepreneur who aims to help those making IT related business decisions, from Administrators through Architects to CIOs. Having held just about every title in the IT field all the way up through CTO, he lends his industry experience and multi-platform thinking to all who need it. Creating a vision and executing it are two different things, and he is here to help with both. Seeing the forest and the trees at the same time is a special skill which takes years of experience to develop.
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