Why Corporate Cloud Storage Doesn't Add Up 141
snydeq writes "Deep End's Paul Venezia sees few business IT situations that could make good use of full cloud storage services, outside of startups. 'As IT continues in a zigzag path of figuring out what to do with this "cloud" stuff, it seems that some companies are getting ahead of themselves. In particular, the concept of outsourcing storage to a cloud provider puzzles me. I can see some benefits in other cloud services (though I still find the trust aspect difficult to reconcile), but full-on cloud storage offerings don't make sense outside of some rare circumstances.'"
we get approached all the time (Score:5, Interesting)
I work for a printing company... cloud storage companies call us all the time with the pitches. Then they ask .. "how much data are you currently backing up?" .. we say "around 38 terabyte's" .. they say .. "no .. we aren't asking what your archives are, we are asking what your daily backups are." we say "we back up once a week. our weekly backups are around 38 terabytes." Then they say "that is a little more than we can handle" so I ask "well what can you handle?" almost every one of them has said they generally look for companies that have between 500GB and 1TB of storage. I guess if you fit that spec, it would work.
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That sounds like someone with a computer with a couple of external hard drives plugged in using cloud as a buzzword.
Although I've always been curious how Amazon can offer pricing for 5 petabytes and above.
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"That sounds like someone with a computer with a couple of external hard drives plugged in using cloud as a buzzword."
That sound a customer restriction to me. I can own a bazillion petabytes worth of storage but if you are in the other side of a cable modem there's no way you can exchange with me 38TB a week.
Storage is pathetic (Score:5, Insightful)
I have the same issue. I work for a small suburban newspaper, and even our hot data set is over 1TB, plus append-only archival data of more than 4TB.
When I tell these "cloud backup" providers this they do a double-take and then start talking laughably high prices or they just back off and say they can't really handle our archival data set. It's quite pathetic when my 10TB backup storage server in a fire-resistant, water-resistant enclosure in the shed cost under $5k when built - and that was when 10x1TB disks was a lot so the disks cost over $2500 by themselves.
Because I'm in Australia I also have the issue of bandwidth. I'd need a backup provider to peer with my ISP via a local peering point that offers unmetered traffic; with 100GB/month limits considered very big here I couldn't possibly back up over a metered link. Even then, my redundant two ADSL2+ links achive about 6Mbit/750kbit and 4Mbit/500kbit per second each, so I'd probably need to pay to run fibre from the nearest line along the train line (est $50,000) and pay over $1000/month for a fibre service just to talk to the backup storage host.
I'm negotiating to move our backup server to a business down the street and run an 802.11n point-to-point directional link between us instead. We each get to fail over to each others' Internet services if necessary, we exchange backup storage, and neither of us gets to pay through the nose for it. It's not as good as a fast link to a DC somewhere, but it's a hell of a lot more practical.
The other issue with cloud backups arises when you need that 5TB (mine) or 38TB (yours) in a hurry, for disaster recovery. You can't exactly run down the street and grab the server with its disk array then restore over 1Gbit ethernet or direct to locally attached SAS/eSATA/whatever. Nope, you have to download all that data over whatever Internet link you have access to. If that's not the dedicated fast link your premises has (say, if they've burned down) then you are screwed.
I'll keep my primary backups within driving distance, thanks.
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The SME company I work at is currently looking at new accounts software, and we've been investigating using hosted servers for just about everything. Our data is nothin
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While I like the *idea* of cloud hosting making the office portable, it only works for some kinds of work, and has its own downsides.
Australia has only a couple of big international data links, and they've been known to go down when cables get cut by idiot trawlers. This usually causes severe congestion on the other links and I would NOT want to be running my business off those links when this happens. If you're not in .AU/.NZ, this probably isn't an issue for you, and in .AU or .NZ one can always host with
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What do you mean by "or"? In Australia they have all three at once!
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Surely the issue is not how much data you have, but how much bandwidth you need.
You can physically perform the initial transfer, so no problem if it's 1GB or 100TB.
The question is, do you need to access more of that than the bandwidth can carry?
If you need to extensively modify all of that data each day, then clearly cloud won't work for you if those modifications require lots of data from outside the cloud data centre.
RS
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The other issue with cloud backups arises when you need that 5TB (mine) or 38TB (yours) in a hurry, for disaster recovery.
LTO-5 drive is roughly $2K USD. Tapes are roughly $55/per. Uncompressed capacity is 1.5TB. Compressed is 3.0TB, assuming 2:1 compression. Your data is two tapes worth of data. And if your needs are larger, you can always add more sophicated software and multiple drives and still be way ahead in the long run.
Like so many others, you've forgotten there is a reason tape exists. Network bandwidth isn't always the best solution - for all the reasons you point out. And givent the cost of many network archival sol
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I used to use DDS4 back in the dark old days, and I quickly became all too familiar with their tendency to be write-only media even with regular drive cleaning, tape replacement and occasional tape re-tensioning. I know LTO is better, but when I was building this backup server high-capacity LTO was also eye-bleedingly expensive.
LTO has been forced down dramatically by effective competition from rotating magnetic media. Tapes and drives sure weren't those kind of prices when I built that system! I priced al
Tape (Score:2)
OK, I've gone and looked into the current situation with tape. All prices are in AUD from vendors in Australia; 1 AUD = 1.06 USD at the moment, so they're close enough to the the same.
LTO-5 drives are now AU$2500 to AU$3000 + SAS HBA, a good year or two after I built that backup server. Most of our data set is data in formats that're already efficiently compressed with JPEG, LZO, PNG, deflate/zlib, etc, there's no significant compression gain; tapes can be presumed to be 1.5TB. The weekly hot set is over 1T
Uh, what? (Score:3, Insightful)
To the best of my knowledge, nobody pitches this 'cloud storage' stuff as a replacement for local storage, unless they are also selling some hosted software-as-a-vendor-lock-in 'solution'. It's a sufficiently overwhelmingly bad idea that nobody even tries. So, what exactly is he wasting an article on?
Yup, SATA drives are cheap and reasonably zippy. Y'know what's less cheap, more complex, and not as zippy? Good Backups, including offsite. And that, (along with the web hosting and CDN focused stuff) is what the 'cloud' people are selling. No shit delivering files over the internet with a 200ms round-trip and a teeny pipe isn't going to replace the local storage or a network share a couple of GigE hops away. Replace that balky tape library the next time it conks out, though? Not certain; but much more conceivable...
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Yeah, especially since most local storage these days are appliances that pretty much manage themselves. And there's that physical access part of security -- if it's locked in your machine room with no path to the outside world, it's a lot harder to steal your data.
Re:Uh, what? (Score:5, Informative)
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The problem is that file storage is so dad-gum expensive these days. 15cents a gb at Amazon makes it $150 per month for a terabyte of storage. You're better off buying the 1TB drives yourself and rotating it to an employee's house every night.
Sure there are some cheaper alternatives (nimbus.io) but even at 6cents a GB with Nimbus, you're still better off buying the external drives yourself.
But you've got to pay someone to keep track of those drives (you do have more than one, right?), and shuttle them back and forth from home (if you're in earthquake country, he better not live too close to the office. If he spends a few hours/month doing these daily drive swaps, then it may be worth paying Amazon $150/month to store the data for you and you can replicate your data offsite more than once/day.
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Do your staff also have fireproof safes and armoured cars? I'm not sure where the capacity / logistics cost curves intersect but once the robot, tapes, fireproof safe and sealable, serial-numbered tape containers were purchased I found a very significant recurring cost of backing up a site of about 100 people was the weekly visit from the security company that transferred last week's tapes from our fireproof safe to their 24/7 monitored, environment-controlled, fire and flood-proof storage facility. I dr
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Ok, I used to do technical competency testing for backup solutions. I've written papers on it. Most of the tracking and recovery is done in software these days. Has been for years. If you're keeping spreadsheets to track which box to get back, you're doing it wrong.
Geosynch means synchronizing your data with a geographically remote location. This does not necessarily protect you from data corruption, but it does protect you from hardware failure. This is easiest to do for companies with offices in rem
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Exactly.
Australia (Score:2)
Now try being in Australia, where in addition to those downsides we have tightly metered traffic on Internet links, not just for international traffic over the undersea cables but for ALL traffic not to/from our local ISP.
People trying to sell cloud storage in this environment are off their nut.
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The problem is that file storage is so dad-gum expensive these days. 15cents a gb at Amazon makes it $150 per month for a terabyte of storage. You're better off buying the 1TB drives yourself and rotating it to an employee's house every night. Sure there are some cheaper alternatives (nimbus.io) but even at 6cents a GB with Nimbus, you're still better off buying the external drives yourself.
Buying a 1TB drive for your backup may be fine for your home computer (I do that myself) but tell that to companies who backup peta-bytes of data a day. Don't know them try your local Telco's. Even local Councils require backups of many TB per week.
BTW. Can your 1TB backup solution allow for recovery of data that is 1 week, 2 weeks, 1 month, 3 months even up to 7 years or more old? By law many companies are required to keep data up to 7 years old.
A professional backup and recovery solution can range fro
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Nobody seriously considers a single 1TB drive to be an enterprise solution to anything. But an enterprise solution has the funds for dozens, maybe hundreds of drives. After all, what is the data worth?
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Yeah, especially since most local storage these days are appliances that pretty much manage themselves. And there's that physical access part of security -- if it's locked in your machine room with no path to the outside world, it's a lot harder to steal your data.
While it may be much harder to steal the data that's locked in your machine room, if that's the only place it exists, you're guaranteed to lose it when you have a machine room disaster (fire, fire supression release, transformer explosion, etc).
Most enterprise backup software will encrypt your data for offsite storage. A cloud storage vendor can also offer encryption options where you are the only one with the decryption key.
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Geo synchronization. I used to teach that. It works really well. Really, these solutions are well known.
Re:Uh, what? (Score:4, Informative)
I don't know if you have been in corporate IT lately but these people selling the crap are indeed selling this as the end-all-be-all of computing. Everything (data storage, web hosting, virtual servers, desktops, crm and similar databasing needs, e-mail, ...) is supposed to be in the cloud at a much lower price point. Microsoft is one of the worst offenders as they sell their entire suite (Exchange, AD, ShitPoint, Office ...) in the "cloud" these days, promise the world but have no way to deliver.
If you have an IT organization with more than 2 IT people where stuffing the "cloud" (or having everything hosted for you) is going to end up being cheaper you have a really badly managed department that is extremely bloated.
For enterprise data storage: average price is $1,000/TB/year (Amazon et al) while a decent locally managed system (SAS, HA) should be ~$100-300/TB/year. Off course if you pay NetApp or the like (at ~$3,000/TB/year) for your storage, you brought this upon yourself and the person making that decision should've been fired.
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For enterprise data storage: average price is $1,000/TB/year (Amazon et al) while a decent locally managed system (SAS, HA) should be ~$100-300/TB/year.
Don't forget to factor in the cost of the bandwidth to the storage.
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I suppose if you're a tiny company with a tiny amount of data to backup it'd make sense. If you had even a few tens of gigabytes of data why do you want your offsite storage behind a network connection that can deliver perhaps 1 MB/s? Sure if I want to do an occasional file restore, but when the shit hit the fan I want to be able to bring a crate full of tapes into my data center and streaming off of 8 tape drives at 400 MB/s.
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Though such services are also useful for small companies that are not set up to host their own servers and want to move files between far flung people. I think a lot of geeks tend to forget that not every company is interested in having its own servers and IT dept when their buisness has nothing to do with computers.
Author is clueless about current IT. (Score:1)
Re:Author is clueless about current IT. (Score:4, Informative)
We use Box for 300 people in 8 countries and I use Dropbox and Skyfile for personal file storage and sharing. There is a place for Cloud storage in corporate IT since the end users are using these services on mobile devices already. The author is obviously out of touch with current CIO initiatives, I talk to these guys everyday and most are looking to use cloud services for file storage and sharing.
Do any of these CIOs run companies that fall under SOX, HIPAA, or PCI? How does your CIO ensure that files stored on the cloud storage meet any of those regulatory requirements? All it takes is one personnel file with medical records to leak into the wild to for the company to face liability under HIPAA for unauthorized release. If the company knowingly allowed sensitive files to be stored in unsecured storage, the penalties could be substantial.
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Fortunately, not every business falls under the dark cloud of socialist regulatory agencies. Some companies run unfettered and free in the glorious economic wilderness that is the American capitalist system.
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Fortunately, not every business falls under the dark cloud of socialist regulatory agencies. Some companies run unfettered and free in the glorious economic wilderness that is the American capitalist system.
But how many of those free and unfettered businesses are large enough to have a CIO?
The cloud has always existed for Corp IT (Score:5, Insightful)
Why don't people look in the history books of computing. If they did they would see that in the before the 80's everything was in "the cloud", except back then they called it servers. They rented these servers and the storage space from IBM, Digital, HP and a few other server providers. The personal computer came a long and data started shifting on to local hard drives and WIntel or Novell LAN servers.
Now they have the problem of trying to maintain every spreadsheet and Access DB sitting on a managers laptop. To solve this they are going back to the future and storing stuff back on servers sold to us by young people who never knew what DASD is. Controls and audits will demand restricted access and rules be put in the cloud for protection just like before. After about 10 years we will all be bitching and complaining about the cloud and praising local storage for it's ease of access and not having our data held hostage by providers. Lather, rinse, repeat.
There is nothing new under the sun people, just move along.
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God damn it, where are my mod points when I need them.
+5 Insightful
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Reminds me of a funny Isaac Asimov short story in which people completely forget how to do math by hand other than with a calculator and then rediscover the "lost art."
http://www.themathlab.com/writings/short%20stories/feeling.htm [themathlab.com]
Good story and pretty apt with regards to the ephemeral nature of human memory.
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+1 Interesting, but I already posted
a couple points beyond the obvious "everything old is new again"
railroads and ziggurats are just as old as far as these people are concerned
analogy to Einstein feeling guilty about research that led to the atomic bomb
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Back then they called it mainframes and timeshare. It's why I called this timeshare 2.0.
I like some of these services like iCloud where as a small business owner I can update my calendar on my phone and it's automatically synced with my computer and iPad. Same even with Pages now and iCloud. I like the syncing feature. But you know what else that I like: the fact that a local copy still exists on my disk drives. If I'm flying across the country I can still read and edit the local copies on the plane ev
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The Wheel of Time turns, and Ages come and pass, leaving memories that become legend. Legend fades to myth, and even myth is long forgotten when the Age that gave it birth comes again.
Re:The cloud has always existed for Corp IT (Score:5, Insightful)
Those who forget history are doomed to pay overpriced consultants to reinvent it for them.
The bottom line is we don't need IT department (Score:3)
Ok. Maybe one person to be an adviser on which services to use and how to configure them, (and which Mac models to buy heh heh) but that's about it.
In that context, cloud storage makes eminent sense because for the cloud service provider, providing reliable storage, or apps, or whatever, is their core competency.
It is not your company's core competency. They will do it better than you. Period.
Such storage would make even more sense if it was properly fragmented, onion-routed, multiply encryption-wrapped, encryption-upgradable-in-place etc etc etc but that will all come, as will, one hopes, open standards so that cloud storage is not vendor-locked.
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The notion that companies should do only one thing is misguided. They shouldn't squander their resources trying to be everything, true, but for companies beyond a certain size, they can provide these services cheaper than "cloud" companies can. Why? Well, because the provider isn't doing anything you can't do. If you're a big company or a government, you already own data centers. You already own staff. You already own so
Re:The bottom line is we don't need IT department (Score:5, Insightful)
Right - and when you can integrate your SAP Cloud ERP system, your SalesForce.com CRM system, your Workday HRIS, *and* the data from your 500 retail locations that you poll daily, all within your Netezza AppNexus data warehouse to generate dashboards using your MicroStrategy MCDWS BI system, without your IT department, you let us know...
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That's not true once you get to a certain size. If your company considers IT and storage to be a cost, then yes, a third party (where storage is their revenue source) will do it better. If your company considers IT and storage to be an investment, then they can do it just as good (if not better) than a third party.
It's not really to do with size, but rather to do with "core competencies". Small firms tend to only have a narrow range of things that they consider to be their secret sauce, and that usually doesn't include IT (excluding IT firms of course). Larger companies start to include IT as part of what they know how to do well, just as they also know a reasonable amount about HR and finance.
The other thing that drives clouds is the cost of a datacenter; a large one is a huge investment, and even big organizations
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They will comply with their SLA better than you, you mean. And if the cloud provider goes under (e.g., we have another dotcom crash), are there any guarantees you get your data back? How about the peeps with stuff on megaupload?
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In that context, cloud storage makes eminent sense because for the cloud service provider, providing reliable storage, or apps, or whatever, is their core competency.
And yet we still see failures from the biggest players like the EC2 crash [techmento.com], the Danger fiasco [techcrunch.com], iCloud failing [time.com] or gmail outages [computerworld.com.au]. Go 'The Cloud'.
It is not your company's core competency. They will do it better than you. Period.
Yeah because we all know McDonalds' IT systems are managed by the guy flipping the burgers, they don't actually have qualified IT guys there. Seriously you haven't realized that it's just outsourcing the IT department? You think these 'cloud' providers are some other sort of entity that aren't just IT guys running an IT contracting business as opposed to internal divi
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Good for backups, but few decent svcs exist (Score:5, Informative)
For me the one attractive use case for cloud storage is for backups - and it's one that's catered to particularly poorly by current offerings.
For backups, you want (a) fast, unmetered links to the host and (b) moderately reliable, cheap, and not-that-fast storage you can access in a variety of different ways depending on what's most convenient, with or without running your own VPS to mediate between storage and storage clients.
One user will want to rsync to their cloud storage. One will want to remote-mount a file system on it via iSCSI. Another will want to run a Bacula storage daemon on it. Yet another will want to use it as a co-ordinator for a full network backup system. All these use cases should really be supported, and the first two shouldn't need the customer to maintain their own VPS to control the storage.
As things stand, almost everyone wants to sell SAN-based high performance storage that's *expensive* and *fast*, not cheap and slow. Most backup services seem to want you to use their tools or a local appliance to talk to their storage. Half of them act very confused when you mention "Linux" or "UNIX" and ask if that's a new kind of Mac or something. At least in Australia I've found the market miserably unsatisfying so far.
What I'd really like is for ISPs to begin offering, or partnering with others to offer via peering, bulk near-line storage at moderately affordable rates. That way you can talk to it over your business's main ADSL/SHDSL/fibre/whatever link(s) without dealing with quotas, it's fast, there are multiple routes to it, and it's unlikely to go down if an international link has a hiccup.
iiNet's cloud offering looked like it might have potential for this, but it turns out to be just another EC2-wannabe crossed with Linode-done-badly-and-expensively. The storage offerings are miserable and they don't even mention whether traffic between iiNet internet services and their cloud is metered
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Not that it would meet your wishlist, but amazon does have an S3 gateway appliance https://forums.aws.amazon.com/ann.jspa?annID=1334 [amazon.com]
you dump your files to it at local speeds, and it uploads them to S3 in the background. (basically seems like a buffer for reads and writes)
cloud storage? no thanks (Score:3)
At the end of the day it comes down to this: who is responsible for keeping your data? With failures in amazon's cloud service, a provider over east in Australia that got hacked and lost all backups, etc - trusting your company's data to someone else is a BIG call to make and understandably, many businesses are wary of the idea.
At least if the data is stored on premises, and on backup tapes, you have options with regards to data retention/data recovery. Once you upload all your stuff to the cloud, you're at the mercy of your cloud provider. Sure, you may have an SLA, but SLAs mean shit if your company is unable to get access to it's data when required - or would like to prevent third parties from obtaining access to data (such as foreign governments) that the cloud provider may be persuaded or legally required to divulge.
a fool and his money are soon parted (Score:2)
It doesn't make sense on a small scale either. (Score:3)
I signed up for Dropbox and my experience with it is that it's slow as molasses when uploading and I can't just drop a link there and have it point at my server. Nono, I must upload the entire file itself.
Most people would be better off with Opera Unite. While some here may laugh and point at it because it is not a full-blown server setup, it is probably the easiest ad-hoc file sharing/server program going. Sure, I've personally installed Apache, sftpd and sshd on my home server but just the concepts of these services alone are beyond the grasp of most people. Opera Unite makes this kind of thing drool-proof.
You declare which directories are shared and that's it. You're done. No uploading to the "cloud" like Dropbox, Skydrive, or Apple's music thingy (and Unite will do media streaming). And you don't get locked in or risk losing control of your data should the cloud service get closed down.
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BMO
A peer to peer cloud is still a cloud (Score:2)
It's just more like cirrocumulus than cumulonimbus.
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Cloud service is just a new term for big-iron mainframe service. It is mainframe companies with a new old purpose in life.
Unite and other peer-to-peer is not the same thing.
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BMO
bulk data (Score:1)
Why not corporate external cloud data-storage? (Score:2)
Who pwns u 848y?
This too shall pass (Score:2)
As soon as IT managers figure out they are paying a premium for the same set of problems they battle with in-house this will all be over with ver quickly and we can all get back to work.
Credit Industry (Score:2)
Private cloud (Score:5, Insightful)
They will literaly save hundreds of millions in hardware and power bills, as they can consolidate tons of servers together. The reason? Most boxes that they current have, utilize 1% of network traffic, less than 1% of CPU, and about 10% of hard disk space. Why? Because every project has their own boxes for political reasons, for redundancy, and most importantly, so that when they saved $10,000/year on hardware, they didn't lose $1,000,000 because the service was unavailable for half a day.
Because private cloud means that you have an instant sandbox for your apps, over a number of servers that the app can freely be moved to, this is the driver behind adoption of the model.
Public cloud is laughable to them, as the public cloud providers can pry their data from the company's cold dead hands.
Not to mention the wonderful PR side effect of the company being "green".
Re:Private cloud (Score:5, Interesting)
Not to mention the wonderful PR side effect of the company being "green".
Yup. Here's a pull-quote from a 2/13/2012 Dell press release, "Dell Opens New Western Technology Center in Quincy, Washington":
"Power Usage Effectiveness" was originally coined "Power Usage Kilowatt Effectiveness" until someone pointed out its acronym.
Re:Private cloud (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem is you're talking about virtualization, not cloud. Cloud is a real thing that not many people actually do. It's also a nonsense buzzword sprinkled like MSG across the menu of everything IT does. Excuse the pun, but virtually none of what is called cloud deserves the name.
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A common mistake...
Amazon's stuff is virtualizated too I bet, but what makes a cloud and virtualization different is the provider, cloud is 3rd party: amazon, etc... and in the case of amazon they're probably virtualized too, but you don't know that just from the cloud. I'm sure they have a few things set up like terminal servers to increase their efficiency, which is not necessarily a part of virtualization either.
Re:Private cloud (Score:5, Insightful)
Undoubtedly so. In fact I can't imagine for a second that Amazon and the like aren't running on VMs. But you're exactly right. Virtualization by itself is not cloud any more than an engine is a car. There, you knew there was a car analogy in there somewhere, didn't you? ;-)
It's not a mistake, though, it's marketechture. Virtualization is old hat. You can't get people to shell out the big bucks for that, but if you rebrand it "cloud" (ooooh!) you can get people to pay more.
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[...] what makes a cloud and virtualization different is the provider, cloud is 3rd party: amazon, etc...
Marten Mickos (CEO of MySQL for 7 years) disagrees with you: Keynote at Cloud Expo Europe - Clouds Are All About APIs. [eucalyptus.com].
His new product provides in-house cloud services. If you listen you his talk you will understand why in-house clouds are very different from virtualization. You can buy co-hosted virtualized servers. They are different from cloud services. The same distinction exists when these services are provided in-house.
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Except *this* is what has muddied the term Cloud. Look, the Cloud term sucked to begin with, much like "GRID Computing", which was the predecessor buzz-term in spirit. But we already had a word for the local Cloud, it was called Virtualization. Cloud meant "remote virtualization handled by a 3rd party". Then Cloud became a money word and people working on Virtualization decided they had to rebrand it as the "Local Cloud". It's stupid.
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"cloud is 3rd party"
Except when it is a private cloud. So no, cloud is not 3rd party.
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""Private cloud" is virtually an oxymoron"
No, it is not.
"Cloud is not defined by the hosting facility/type, whether self, 3rd party, or co-lo"
Yes, you are right on this.
"Nor does it have to be virtualised architecture"
Truly. Right again.
"Cloud IS a decentralised, distributed set of services & infrastructure, that are made centrally available - the user/customer doesn't & shouldn't give a rat's arse where/what the apps run on, how the database is stored or who is doing the admin/maintenance"
Right ag
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Good rant... except for the little fact that you did forget about defining "cloud".
"Cloud" is marketroid speech and because of that, with a purporsely "nebulous" definition (pun intended): so others can say "but, ah! your cloud is not the real cloud, mine is".
I for one would say that if the customer is not location-aware and can self-service on-demand, it is cloud. And certainly you can have storage delivered that way.
Re:Private cloud (Score:5, Funny)
Nobody takes them cirrusly.
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"I like to go with the original definition. If you know what is being done with your data, it isn't a 'cloud'."
I expect you are trying to be funny (but sorrily you don't get it).
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I get it completely. If you use the definition of "if the customer is not location-aware and can self-service on-demand, it is cloud", then cloud is old news. It has been widely available for decades, and has gone by many other names. The name 'cloud' is a direct misunderstanding of the network diagram image that indicated a part of the network that was you do not have control or understand of. The cloud represented something t
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"but in the "funny because it's true" sort of way."
While I'm the first telling "cloud" is mostly marketroid speech, paraphrasing The Promised Bride, "there's a big difference between mostly marketroid speech and all marketroid speech".
"if the customer is not location-aware and can self-service on-demand, it is cloud", then cloud is old news."
Well, of course cloud is *mostly* old news, but please tell me about specific examples where, i.e., prior to common virtualization for the Intel platform, the end user
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It's a nebulous concept at the best of times.
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Re:Private cloud ... haze, puff, mist, fog .... (Score:2)
Cloud was appropriately chosen to help marketeers sell to those in management that live in clouds, confusion, obscurity ....
The word cloud should be reserved for weather reports/conversations.
Virtualization of infrastructure and web-services/application clouds is how I explain to management. Still I fail to convey any technology analyst/adviser... wisdom too money spenders, career managers, a/o decision makers. Telling management that a CMS is a CMS is a CMS ... still means windchill, filenet ... propriet
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Stubborn old coot. Information wants to be free!
Re:Private cloud (Score:5, Insightful)
I just came from a very large banking organization, and their business case for cloud is to set up a series of private cloud servers. It's not about putting everything on Amazon etc, but rather about putting the services into their own datacentres.
I'm not sure why you got an "insightful" rating for your comment. While what you said is true, a corporate private cloud is not the public cloud the submitted article is talking about.
Private cloud storage has always been around, but it used to be called a "fileserver", or maybe a "SAN", so just because they are calling storage consolidation a "private cloud" doesn't mean it's something new.
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Private cloud storage has always been around, but it used to be called a "fileserver", or maybe a "SAN", so just because they are calling storage consolidation a "private cloud" doesn't mean it's something new.
Indeed, "cloud" has become the must-have buzzword for everything and everyone. I was amused to see that Western Digital is selling a home network storage appliance as a Personal Cloud [wdc.com].
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Re:Private cloud (Score:4, Insightful)
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Best answer in thread. Finally someone who gets it!
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If it's inside your building, it's not the cloud. It's just consolidation and virtualisation and we've been doing it in banks for at least 6 years now in a big way.
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"Most boxes that they current have, utilize 1% of network traffic, less than 1% of CPU, and about 10% of hard disk space." -> I will point out that that's not a bad thing.
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"Most boxes that they current have, utilize 1% of network traffic, less than 1% of CPU, and about 10% of hard disk space." -> I will point out that that's not a bad thing.
Clap, clap. Well done. Give that man a cigar.
Part of the problem is that many of the older leaders come from big companies and are used to big iron. Nothing wrong with big iron - in fact, I think it's often the right solution. But, if that's what you're used to, you tend to think that 100% utilization is a good thing.
In the midrange world, it isn't. Everything goes pear shaped a long time before that. Part of the difference is that services are incredibly more volatile and far fewer, so they don't ba
Re:Private cloud (Score:4, Insightful)
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I'm not into furry stuff, but the TOS for the cloud service I use forbids porn in general.
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wort of deal
Yes... and eye of Gingrich
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If you use a Mac in an enterprise where the Infrastructure admins refuse to investigate why network performance grinds to a halt at 2:30pm everyday on the Windows shares, then you are dying for an alternative, competitive solution to your internal storage monopoly. Especially when your files are destined for publication anyhow, so data security concerns are much less.
Maybe that slowdown is caused by bad behavior from the Macs on the network that IT doesn't know about.
Re:Use a Mac in Enterprise (Score:4, Funny)
obviously the solution is to move the shares to an offsite location on a much thinner pipe
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The cloud is the answer to NOTHING.
Despite off-site storage, automatic backups, the ability to auto-sync to multiple sites, and that there are ways to secure it, it's completely useless!
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The cloud is the answer to NOTHING.
Despite off-site storage, automatic backups, the ability to auto-sync to multiple sites, and that there are ways to secure it, it's completely useless!
Don't forget the wine!
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Not totally true. If for example I asked you, "How would I go about getting app-crushingly high I/O latency and random outages?" you would certainly be able to offer an answer contrary to your above statement.
-B
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That's a bit formulaic, isn't it? Here, watch this:
"Those who live by the tape backup, die by the tape backup."
Seamless.
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