| By Reuven Cohen | Article Rating: |
|
| July 1, 2009 10:45 PM EDT | Reads: |
2,925 |
I'm currently at a wedding, killing time reading various blog feeds. In that task, I just read a generally insightful commentary thanks to particularly ridiculous question in a post by Eric Knipp at Gartner. In the post he asks if The Cloud Will Save The World?
Initially I didn't see where he was going with this idea, spending a little too much time on his so called Killer [cloud] App - Application Platform-as-a-Service (APaaS). Moving to the good stuff, he points out that cloud computing is not "an easy button - in the abstract. Someone, somewhere, has to do heavy lifting in any software development endeavor to build a high-quality, high-availability, highly-reusable Web architecture."
His next question / statement shed some light on his theory, aka my head node moment. "-- companies who learn how to screw down the cost drivers while simultaneously enhancing value drivers to satisfy customer needs have a competitive advantage in their industries."
Bingo. He's hit the nail on the head. Satisfying customer needs is a competitive advantage (finding simplicity in complexity).
So, how does this all add up to the Cloud saving the world? Knipp goes on to say "that as the world grows more complex, the only chance we have to head off the disintegration of modern society under the weight of complexity comes through technological leaps in the form of disruptive innovation. -- Could this new level of simplicity in complexity be the disruptive innovation that saves the world - or at least gives us a bit more time?"
I do enjoy a good news headline as much as the next guy, but I doubt the world will be saved by cloud computing -- unless your counting saving money and scaling your enterprise in the saving the world section things we need to get done. Really what I think this new whiz bang buzzword does is give a more compelling / sexy technology topic to discuss at dinner parties and tech conferences. And for me that's good enough.
Published July 1, 2009 Reads 2,925
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More Stories By Reuven Cohen
Reuven Cohen is Founder & CTO for Toronto based Enomaly Inc. - leading developer of Cloud Computing products and solutions focused on enterprise businesses. Enomaly's products include the Enomaly elastic computing platform, an open source cloud platform that enables a scalable enterprise IT and local cloud infrastructure platform. Cohen is a thought leader in the emerging cloud computing industry and maintains a blog at www.elasticvapor.com.
Reuven is also founder of several technology organizations;
Enomaly.com - Elastic Computing Platform (Cloud Computing),
Cloud Camp - Local Cloud Computing events,
the Unified Cloud Interface Project - Semantic Cloud Abstraction API
Cloud Interoperability Forum - Cloud Standards Group.
(twitter @ruv : Linkedin : RSS Feed)
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