Amazon Cloud Seminar at NASDAQ in New York

Posted by: John Savageau in rightscalemysqlcloud computingamazon on Print 

John Savageau

Had the opportunity to attend a seminar on cloud computing in New York last week put on by Amazon, MySQL, Sun Micro, and a local Santa Barbara company called Rightscale.

While much of the seminar is what you would have expected - heavy marketing and cheerleading on the products and services put on by each company, there were some jewels as well. Probably the most interesting discussion was from the enterprise attendees who were either in the implementation/provisioning process, or in due-diligence phase of preparing a cloud processing proposal for their companies.

Security, surprisingly was not the hottest topic (OK, I am humbled, and admit I was wrong on this point). The hottest topic was the cost of migrating applications from the existing IT infrastructure to a cloud infrastructure, and the fact many companies are still using some very old legacy applications that will require major re-writes prior to bringing those applications into a cloud infrastructure.

The enterprise attendees were a good mixture of financial companies (traders, investment houses, and banking), as well as some attendees from smaller manufacturing and import/export companies. All definitely had cloud on their minds, and even those who did not have short term plans admitted they needed to bring themselves up to speed quickly, as corporate management has begun asking cost/benefit questions related to running internal data centers -vs- outsourcing to a third-party data data center or cloud.

Rightscale did a very credible job of explaining this is not a simple task, and that even the most savvy companies can use professional assistance in building both their business case, as well as migration and vendor selection strategies. We'll put Rightscale on the SoCal tech watch list next to 3tera. (www.rightscale.com)

This week brings more cloudy planning, venturing to San Diego to attend the San Diego Software Industry Council (SDSIC) weekly meeting - with this week's topic on the state and future of cloud computing.

Comments (1)Add Comment
63
AWS Solves Ever Expanding Storage and Backup Requirements
written by Russ Haft, March 08, 2009
Wish I could have attended the meeting too! I recently completed a proposal for a multi-billion dollar global cruise line that was interested in implementing an online digital asset management system that could be accessed by their various media and marketing agencies around the world. The technology core of my proposal included various Amazon Web Services (EC2, S3, EBS) working together to provide high-performance access and services for a terabyte of assets. The 'cloud' was a perfect solution to ever-expanding storage needs including a synced backup of assets, also in the cloud. Every fixed-asset solution I considered quickly led to the question "What do we do when we need more storage or bandwidth?". Amazon's Web Services removed these important unknowns from the solution at a much lower cost and a more friendly nod to the environment. I also tested RightScale's software (essentially a full-featured, online front-end to AWS) and it added a lot of functionality that made it easier to manage the cloud resources. One of the areas which is a bit more complicated now than it will be in the near future is addressing load-balancing needs for a quickly expanding Website. While this is doable now using a front-end proxy or external DNS (round-robin) approaches, none of these solutions is optimal. Ultimately, load-balancing needs to be a drop-in component inside the cloud.

Write comment

busy