Page 59 - How Cloud Computing Is Transforming Business and Why You Cant Afford to Be Left Behind
P. 59

THE AMORPHOUS CL OUD



                 scientists. Are these supercomputers automatically considered
                 part of the cloud as well?
                     No, they are not, at least not yet. Cloud computing con-
                 notes a business model of elastic resources being available on
                 demand to whomever needs them, without special qualifica-
                 tions, at low hourly rates. All of the examples just given were

                 previously reserved for a select few. Now, the cloud makes elas-
                 ticity available as part of a commodity service that is available
                 to every type of business, large or small. That cloud model
                 dictates a type of data center architecture that both can be
                 quickly expanded and is cost-effective for the resources put
                 into it. In cloud computing, building a cloud-based data cen-
                 ter on the network out of the most reliable but lowest-cost

                 parts appears to be a special skill.
                     For there to be a PC revolution, Intel, AMD, and a handful
                 of other chip suppliers had to master the art of producing mi-
                 croprocessors cheaply and make the process reliable as it ran
                 through millions of repetitions. These manufacturers pushed
                 forward the performance of their initially weak designs at
                 a rapid rate. “In the early ’90s, the continuing rise of micro-
                 processor performance made itself felt,” wrote Gregory Pfis-
                 ter, an IBM researcher who summed up the trend in his 1995

                 book In Search of Clusters.
                     Cloud data centers are built out of what are essentially per-
                 sonal computer parts, with memory, microprocessors, and
                 disk drives that have been perfected through the process of
                 being mass produced by the million, with ruthless competi-
                 tion weeding out any company that is prone to produce faulty
                 parts. A desktop or laptop microprocessor isn’t much to behold



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