Re: Smart kids in the UK are making better career decisions too
That is a great point - I should have made that in the article! :-)
10 publicly visible posts • joined 19 Aug 2009
I have found dozens of examples of people making good use of virtualisation. Some examples of people incorporating on demand, self service type interfaces. I have even found one or two organisations that are starting to test pay as you use cost models.
None of these are private clouds.
On the worst end of the spectrum I have come across “Private Cloud” projects in Government organisations for which the business case reads something along the lines of “We will buy heaps of servers, we will use VMware, and we will be cloudy”! Even if these projects condensed water vapour from the atmosphere until precipitation occurred you still couldn’t call them private clouds.
I am beginning to form the view that Private cloud is a seriously dangerous concept, proposed by fearful IT organisations that want to be seen to be leading edge but aren’t prepared to give up the chattels of traditional enterprise IT.
Maybe we should start to stigmatise the words “Private Cloud”. Maybe we should force people to use the word Hypervisvirtualisondemandify instead; it would make them feel as silly saying it as the concept truly is.
If you could build a private cloud and out-compete Amazon (or any other public cloud provider) on price then go right ahead, otherwise put the money towards something more useful.
Perhaps you should have hit him up for an all expenses trip to sample the finest that Bellefontaine, Ohio has to offer.
This bustling metropolis of over 13,000 is famous the world over for having the first concrete street in America built in 1801, and the shortest street in America, McKinley Street, which is about 20 feet long.
There could be a signing ceremony followed by beers at the Jug & Jazz Bar & Restaurant. (darts tournament from 9:00pm). http://www.theregister.co.uk/Design/graphics/icons/comment/pint_32.png
I just don't get these "Security" issues that prevent adoption of Cloud Computing. What is different in a cloud model? You still need infrastructure to be securely configured, you still need the gateway to be sensibly configured, you need the network layer to transmit in a secure way and you need the information to be secure at rest. All of this is possible with any cloud vendor.
I just don't get how multi tennancy adds any new security problems other than (and this is hardly a barrier in most circumstances) which country the data is stored.
I think that Control issues are more likely to be a barrier than security ones.
This article doesn't serve the purpose i was expecting and it feel somewhat ad-like. There is no information about what the legal requirements for IM are - just a warning about what will happen if you are sued in relation to an employees conduct on IM. The thing I would have loved to have seen in this article would be what are the legal implications of people entering into an implied contractual agreeement over IM.