From the Editors: The cloud changes some things
By SD Times Editorial Board
August 15, 2011 —
(Page 1 of 3)
When you talk to a cloud solutions vendor—and we talk to all of them—the breathless refrain is, “The cloud changes everything!” You hear that over and over and over again.
When you talk to enterprise development managers, some of them are interested in the cloud, but many of them aren’t. Some of them see cloud-based systems as valuable for deployed applications, or for hosting development tools, or for reducing IT costs. Some of them value the scalability of the cloud, but others are concerned about bringing a third-party provider between them and their intellectual property. Some of them aren’t worried about security or standards—but many are.
And, of course, while the ROI benefits of the cloud sound great in marketing literature, it’s unclear exactly what the long-term financial implications are. Certainly there’s a shift from capital expenditures to operational budgets, but not all organizations value the CapEx vs. OpEx tradeoffs the same way.
What about DevOps, the new term often used for a combination of application life-cycle management + IT service management + the cloud? We hear that a lot more from vendors than we do from our readers.
So far, it looks like that the cries of “The cloud changes everything!” is a lot more hyperbole than reality. Certainly, we’re sure that a few organizations have totally embraced the cloud; use hosted development tools and collaborative workspaces; have powered down their data centers; and live an entirely Internet-based app world of mashups and virtual images and platform-as-a-service deployments.
We’re equally certain that the inverse it also true, that there are companies that see no reason to give up their tried-and-true development tools and practices, and are quite content to continue hosting their software, data and middleware inside their very own data centers, on their own hardware, running on their own networks behind their own firewalls, thank you very much.
Our own IT organization falls into a third group. Our core business systems continue to be developed and deployed using traditional technologies, but we’re carefully (and optimistically) experimenting with cloud-based solutions. The jury is out, however, as to whether, when and where those new technologies will be used for production systems.
Related Search Term(s): AIR, cloud, Flex, HTML5, Silverlight
Share this link: http://sdt.bz/35938
Most Read Latest News Blog Resources
Android is the focus of two new design tools
Anywhere Software and Xamarin provide ways for developers to create and test their applications on PCs
|
|
LEADTOOLS HTML5 add-on modules released
Including New HTML5 Zero Footprint Viewer, JavaScript Libraries and RESTful Web Services for Document and Medical SDKs
|
|
How to speed up your Cukes
Using a five-step process derived from Six Sigma, Cucumber tests can go much faster
|
|
WhiteSource offers open-source license management as a service
Software gives companies insight into the open-source components in products
|
SmartBear rolls out new quality solution: API Complete
Software gives organizations ability to write test scripts and monitor APIs by bridging the DevOps divide
|
|
Android is the focus of two new design tools
Anywhere Software and Xamarin provide ways for developers to create and test their applications on PCs
|
|
WhiteSource offers open-source license management as a service
Software gives companies insight into the open-source components in products
|
|
Top five devices you can integrate with your applications
A five-fingered list of common, household items with which you can talk to (via software, of course)
|
Slick...but who needs it?
compilr.com is a well-designed site and the folks behind it seem to have their heart in the right place. But...who needs it?
|
|
How to be a better software developer
Want to be a better developer? You won't get there by mastering an interesting language or learning a new set of APIs.
|
|
Wooing Galatea
Do yourself a favor and check out Galatea 2.2, a wonderful book by novelist Richard Powers.
|
|
The world as story
An artificial-intelligence system at Carnegie Mellon seeks to understand the world by making statements about it.
|
Five SCM Best Practices
Two-thirds of all software projects fail, according to the Standish Group’s CHAOS study. Improper usage of software configuration management...
|
|
|
Best Practices for Branching and Merging Patterns
Development teams often create a branching pattern, usually drawn out on a white board or in a Visio document, that is used as a model to...
|
|
Automated Error Reporting
We invite you to read a short e-zine that tells you all about automated error reporting for .NET applications. This 8-page e-zine is packed...
|
|
The End of Application Redeploys
Imagine that every time you wanted to write, send or receive an email, you needed to restart your computer. How much time would this take, a...
|