Page 22 - How Cloud Computing Is Transforming Business and Why You Cant Afford to Be Left Behind
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MANA GEMENT STRATEGIES F O R THE CL OUD R EV OL UTION



                 that affected the project at hand was in the data center; the
                 cloud was a mishmash of remotely connected parts and net-
                 work protocols that didn’t have much to do with the immedi-
                 ate problem. No matter how nonartistic the systems architect,
                 he could always represent the cloud—an offhand, squiggly
                 circle in the background of his scheme.

                     As business use of the Internet has grown, the cloud has
                 moved from a throwaway symbol in the architect’s diagram to
                 something more substantial and specific: it has become the
                 auxiliary computing, supplied through Web site applications
                 and Web services, such as credit checks and customer address
                 lookups, that backed up the operation of standard business
                 applications in the enterprise data center. Businesses built

                 around Web services, such as Google, Amazon.com, and eBay,
                 produced a new type of data center that was more standard-
                 ized, more automated, and built from mass-produced per-
                 sonal computer parts. Access to these data centers was kept
                 under wraps for several years as their builders sought to main-
                 tain a competitive advantage. As the notion caught on that it
                 was possible to provide more and more powerful services over
                 the Internet, cloud computing came to mean an interaction
                 between an end user, whether a consumer or a business com-

                 puting specialist, and one of these services “in the cloud.”
                     When Microsoft appeared on the scene determined to
                 stake a larger claim to this new form of computing, it started
                 talking about its facilities in Chicago and Ireland as a new type
                 of data center. Google, which played a key role in establishing
                 the type, began illustrating key features of its data centers, and





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