Hmmmm - Pretty sure z/VM and its predecessors predated VMWare !

Jerry Whitteridge
Manager Mainframe Systems & Storage
Albertsons - Safeway Inc.
925 738 9443
Corporate Tieline - 89443

If you feel in control
you just aren't going fast enough.




-----Original Message-----
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU] On Behalf 
Of Lizette Koehler
Sent: Thursday, January 12, 2017 10:56 AM
To: IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU
Subject: EXTERNAL: History of Mainframe Cloud

https://www.ibm.com/blogs/cloud-computing/2014/03/a-brief-history-of-cloud-compu
ting-3/


When we think of cloud computing, we think of situations, products and ideas 
that started in the 21st century. This is not exactly the whole truth. Cloud 
concepts have existed for many years. Here, I will take you back to that time.

It was a gradual evolution that started in the 1950s with mainframe computing.

Multiple users were capable of accessing a central computer through dumb 
terminals, whose only function was to provide access to the mainframe. Because 
of the costs to buy and maintain mainframe computers, it was not practical for 
an organization to buy and maintain one for every employee. Nor did the typical 
user need the large (at the time) storage capacity and processing power that a 
mainframe provided. Providing shared access to a single resource was the 
solution that made economical sense for this sophisticated piece of technology.

After some time, around 1970, the concept of virtual machines (VMs) was created.

Using virtualization software like VMware, it became possible to execute one or 
more operating systems simultaneously in an isolated environment. Complete 
computers (virtual) could be executed inside one physical hardware which in 
turn can run a completely different operating system.

The VM operating system took the 1950s' shared access mainframe to the next 
level, permitting multiple distinct computing environments to reside on one 
physical environment. Virtualization came to drive the technology, and was an 
important catalyst in the communication and information evolution.

In the 1990s, telecommunications companies started offering virtualized private 
network connections.

Historically, telecommunications companies only offered single dedicated 
point-to-point data connections. The newly offered virtualized private network 
connections had the same service quality as their dedicated services at a 
reduced cost. Instead of building out physical infrastructure to allow for more 
users to have their own connections, telecommunications companies were now able 
to provide users with shared access to the same physical infrastructure.

The following list briefly explains the evolution of cloud computing:

. Grid computing: Solving large problems with parallel computing

. Utility computing: Offering computing resources as a metered service

. SaaS: Network-based subscriptions to applications

. Cloud computing: Anytime, anywhere access to IT resources delivered 
dynamically as a service

Now, let's talk a bit about the present.

http://www.softlayer.com/ is one of the largest global providers of cloud 
computing infrastructure.

IBM already has platforms in its portfolio that include private, public and 
hybrid cloud solutions. The purchase of SoftLayer guarantees an even more 
comprehensive 
http://www.ibm.com/blogs/cloud-computing/2014/02/what-is-infrastructure-as-a-ser
vice-iaas/ solution. While many companies look to maintain some applications in 
data centers, many others are moving to public clouds.

Even now, the purchase of bare metal can be modeled in commercial cloud (for 
example, billing by usage or put another way, physical server billing by the 
hour). The result of this is that a bare metal server request with all the 
resources needed, and nothing more, can be delivered with a matter of hours.

In the end, the story is not finished here. The evolution of cloud computing 
has only begun.





Lizette Koehler

statistics: A precise and logical method for stating a half-truth inaccurately

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