Friday, July 2, 2010

Cloud Computing


 


 

1) Cloud Computing is Not a Technology

  • Cloud computing uses new technologies and new models of software construction to enable radical economies and create new competitive roles for IT
  • The business benefits, not the tools that create them, should be the focus of the discussion

2) Cloud Computing is Bought, Not Sold

3) Cloud Computing Means Opportunity, not Constraint

4) True Clouds Have No Hard Edges

5) Enterprise Clouds Enable Customization Without Unproductive Complexity

6) Clouds Create Shared Truth

7) Clouds Can Be Safe

8) The Cloud is a Multi-Vendor, Multi-Product Marketplace

9) The Cloud is a Proven Proposition

10) The Cloud is a Necessity, not an Option

The list above makes no specific mention of any particular technology used to achieve the model of the cloud. Technologies come and go, but business objectives of superior time to value and superior return on investment endure. A cloud computing strategy should be a plan to achieve new value, not a plan to acquire new IT.

It's clear that even the most aggressive purveyors of fear, uncertainty and doubt about the cloud are merely engaged in a holding action: that inside the next three years, clouds will dominate new IT investments, as they may in fact be doing already.

The most important truth, therefore, may be this: now is the time to be building the skills, developing the partner ecosystems, and creating momentum of culture and practice to use the cloud at enterprise strength – tomorrow, if not today.

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