I think you may want to do more reading on Cloud computing and federated 
enterprise before mack such statements. Grid computing is strictly on the 
physical aspect where as Cloud computing is on Logical. 

 



________________________________
From: A W <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Monday, March 16, 2009 10:28:36 PM
Subject: Re: [service-orientated-architecture] Re: Q&A: JP Morgenthal on cloud  
computing today



Cloud computing is simply a buzzword used to
repackage grid computing and utility computing, both of which have existed for
decades. 
Like grid computing, cloud computing requires the use of software that
can divide and distribute components of a program to thousands of computers. 
New advances in processors, actualization technology, disk storage, broadband
Internet access and fast, inexpensive servers have all combined to make cloud
computing a compelling paradigm. 
Cloud computing allows users and companies to
pay for and use the services and storage that they need, when they need them
and, as wireless broadband connection options grow, where they need
them. 
Customers can be billed based upon server utilization, processing
power used or bandwidth consumed. 
As a result, cloud computing has the
potential to upend the software industry entirely, as applications are
purchased, licensed and run over the network instead of a user's desktop. This
shift will put data centers and their administrators at the center of the
distributed network, as processing power, electricity, bandwidth and storage
are all managed remotely.  
Does it work? Does the companies will opt to loose control of their information 
to save money? I think the answer would be YES. But I also think that a more 
problems will appear too.

All the best

Ashraf Galal


On Mon, Mar 16, 2009 at 3:21 PM, Rob Eamon <rea...@cableone. net> wrote:

SearchSOA asked Morgenthal: "What questions should an enterprise architect ask 
when reviewing a proposal for a cloud initiative?"

Would these questions be different from 3, 5, 10 years ago when considering 
outsourcing? Is vetting a so-called cloud provider today different from 
vetting, say, EDS last year? IMO, the questions/needs/ eval criteria for 
considering outsourcing of infrastructure, hosting, etc. have not changed.

Is there anything new that "cloud computing" has introduced?

-Rob



   


      

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