Page 217 - How Cloud Computing Is Transforming Business and Why You Cant Afford to Be Left Behind
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C A L C ULATING THE FUTURE



                 clamshell aircraft that could take off, stage a shallow climb
                 to 130,000 feet over 48 hours, and from there convert a jet
                 engine into a rocket motor for blastoff into space. Once in
                 space, the vehicle used the moon and earth’s gravity to whip
                 it around and send it on its return trip, just like the antique
                 Apollo space capsules had done. Being able to say that you’d

                 seen the dark side of the moon seemed to make the $7,349
                 price of a ticket worth it, and the spacecraft’s makers even had
                 the nerve to say that the carbon footprint of the trip was no
                 greater than that of a regular passenger’s flight from Los An-
                 geles to New York. How could that be? The aerospace engi-
                 neer said that it would have taken platoons of engineers and
                 several billion dollars to come up with the design of the tourist

                 spacecraft at his company, but somehow OuterAdventures
                 Inc. had done it. Now all that the airlines were interested in
                 was building up their fleets of clamshell spacecraft. How had
                 his firm missed this market? He was employed only part time
                 and was trying to find someone who was interested in his jet
                 airplane design skills.
                     This same story was repeated in many forms over and over
                 again until it was clear that a broad disruption was sweeping
                 through much of the economy. No one could point a finger at

                 a single cause, but many industry segments were undergoing
                 rapid change. One thing was clear. Many of the parties that
                 were driving the changes were using the cloud, but you were
                 never sure exactly how they were using it. Sometime around
                 EC2’s fifth birthday, the self-provisioning end user and the
                 cloud data center seemed to mesh into one ongoing, disrup-
                 tive force.



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