Jack
Clark at ZDnet recently published a great series of articles on the current
state of cloud computing, which included an article on utility computing called
“Cloud computing’s utility future gets closer“. It’s one of the best reviews of
where we are in the progression toward utility computing I’ve seen recently –
probably since John Cowan’s blog series on a similar topic or the GigaOm white
paper by Paul Miller called Metered IT: the path to utility computing.
A
few key takeways from the article:
First,
Clark states the cloud is changing nearly every aspect of the technology
markets and more importantly how technology is accessed and used by
organizations and individuals. Completely concur. The question of “what is
cloud” is getting clearer every day. Cloud computing is clearly not just a new
term for an old model, but a very real shift in the way IT resources are
delivered and consumed.
Clark
then defines a utility market as occurring “when an item has been commoditised
to the point that it becomes very hard to differentiate on a technology basis,
and instead companies distinguish themselves through different levels of
service, availability and support.” In some ways, we have certainly gotten to
that point in cloud computing and infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS) as you see
AWS adding new service levels, Google slashing prices, and Amazon responding
with further price cuts, but keep in mind this focuses on the supply side of
the equation – only half of the equation. There is also the demand side of the
equation, which is more important given the fact that there are hundreds of
IaaS suppliers out there today with many adding capacity as we speak. So how
does that demand get fulfilled and what’s missing?
Clark
then turns to what’s missing. Among other things…
“There is not yet a clear market mechanism for homogenising compute and storage
from different providers making them truly interchangeable.” Absolutely agree
and this is the primary reason 6fusion created the WAC to create a single unit
of measure for the measurement and metering of IT resource consumption across
any environment – public, private, virtual or physical. One thing Clark didn’t
mention was the fundamental need for a single unit of measure being a
foundational component of any utility – think kilowatts in electricity or
kilogram in coal.
What
else is missing? “A trading methodology” according to Clark. I would add a
trading platform is missing as well – or more specifically a marketplace of
cloud brokers that serve as intermediaries between the supply and the demand of
computing. As a further example, we agree with James Mitchell from Strategic
Blue that “at the moment, cloud pricing is not rational”. To borrow another
quote from Mitchell: ““can you imagine letting your electricity supplier bill
you for your electricity using a measurement that they have made, using a meter
that they invented, and then quoting it to you in a unit that they have pulled
out of thin air, that cannot be compared to their competitors? Ridiculous!” A single unit of measure and
trading methodology and platform are critical here.
Clark
concludes with this: “As cloud computing continues on its path to become a
utility, the benefits to IT consumers will grow as prices are successively cut,
but companies that cannot operate at the necessary scale of a utility are
likely to run into problems.” Agreed – we are in the very early stages of
utility computing and the land grab has just begun. However, the beauty of a
commoditized utility is that anyone that can participate, both on the supply
and demand side. You are likely to see a long tail market emerge with some very
large players at the top (AWS, Google, Microsoft, etc) and many mid-size and
smaller players survive in the market with access to global demand through
utility computing exchanges when the immovable asset becomes movable.
What
are your thoughts? How close are we to utility computing? What are the big
barriers to getting there from your perspective? The post Utility computing
gets closer in the cloud appeared first on 6fusion.
For
further information visit: http://cloudcomputing.sys-con.com/node/2466924
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