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November 27, 2008

Nicholas Carr gets on the cloud

Nicholas Carr, the controversial academic, believes the shift to cloud computing will mirror the transition that manufacturers made from generating their own power to relying on utilities in the early 20th century. Here he spells out his views to ComputerWorld.

By Thomas Hoffman, Computerworld


In Carr's opinion, IT "is going to be the next great business resource that makes a similar shift," particularly as organisations look to increase their server and storage utilisation rates without dedicating an even more sizable portion of their IT budgets to the salaries of the workers who support those systems.

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Carr's points are echoed in his new book , The Big Switch: Rewiring the World, from Edison to Google, in which he details his case that cloud computing will enable companies to lower their capital equipment costs and reinvest IT money in other areas, such as new product development.

Carr spoke to Computerworld about the expected cloud computing shift and other challenges that IT executives are facing.

Amazon.com's EC2 and S3 cloud services have gone down several times, as have parts of Google Apps. Why should Fortune 1,000 CIOs trust the reliability of the cloud?

It's a good question. If you look overall at the records of Amazon.com and Salesforce.com, they're actually quite good. But they're not perfect, and I don't think they'll ever be perfect anymore than any company's internal systems are perfectly reliable. But I think what we're going to see is that over time, the reliability of these cloud systems is going to steadily increase. And eventually, if not already, they're going to be more reliable than the average company's systems are.

We'll see different things move to the cloud in different stages, and one of the criteria will be, "How reliable do you need this system to be?" For instance, I was speaking a few weeks ago to some federal government CIOs, including some from the intelligence community, and it's pretty clear that there are some sorts of systems that need to be basically bulletproof. And I think it's going to be a long time before companies and governments are going to trust those types of applications to the cloud.

But from what we've seen already, whether it's Amazon's infrastructure or various software-as-a-service offerings, even now the reliability is good enough for a lot of corporate applications.

In addition to security and reliability, one of the top concerns among IT execs is how to avoid getting locked into a particular vendor's cloud service. Any advice you can share on that?

I think buyers should be worried about lock-in. If we're going to have the kind of interoperability and standardised data formats necessary to ensure fairly easy migration among vendors, it's going to have to be the buyers pushing the vendors to move in that direction. Unless the buyers make that a demand for doing business with a vendor, I fear that we'll see a lot of vendors, even if they talk a good game about standardisation, actually pursue strategies to make it hard to get off their clouds, to quote Mick Jagger.

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