Archive for the ‘Cloud Computing’ Category

IT costs accounting

Saturday, December 5th, 2009

So often, I have heard skeptics who would criticize and cynically discard away the concept of measuring, accounting, and charging for IT services within an organization. “Why would you want to do that?“, “what good does that do?” or “there is no value in charging users for IT services“.

Businesses in today’s environment is very different from the past. The markets which businesses operates in are shrinking as they become more competitive, barriers to entry are often getting lower, and in order to grow, many businesses need to go beyond their current market to reach outside their current borders or geography. Selling a product or service to a customer in Singapore will be no more different than selling to a customer in Russia. Whatever it takes, businesses can never confine themselves into a small boundary within a geography or region or market segment. Likewise, consumers and buyers of products and services are no longer confined to a single vendor or supplier. They have ample choices. Advancement of sourcing avenues globally, proliferation of technology and Internet allows consumers and buyers to easily seek, source, compare and purchase from alternative suppliers within several mouse-clicks.

Therefore, the traditional IT function within an organization is no longer just the bunch of backend soldiers managing your email and accounting system. The IT function is slowly transforming and morphing into a business enabling function, providing critical platforms to put the business online, enabling marketing and direct selling of products online, closely coupling the use of IT to complement traditional products (such as IP-enabling products to provide remote monitoring services, data backups, control and management services, analytics services, etc.) and all this means that the traditional IT budget, which used to be a small part of the overall corporate budget, is going up.  In the past decade or so, most businesses’ IT expenditures have gone up significantly, but many are still without adequate tools, processes and policies in place to address the accounting and allocating of IT costs.

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Verizon Business launching new APAC data centre

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

Verizon Business will launch an Asia-Pacific data centre for its computing as a service (CaaS) customers in the region and to address issues of latency, security and compliance.

Ray McQuillan, principal consultant at Verizon Business Global Services, could not name the location for the data centre, but said that it would launch in Q1 of the next calendar year.

“We know that the global coverage – and moving nodes over into the Asia-Pacific – is something on the calendar currently for 2010,” he said. “Right now the CaaS offer is available across the globe, but in terms of having a local presence in Asia-Pacific we have one Europe, one in the US, and another in APAC. That is something the market has been asking for and we have it on our roadmap.”

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Telcos turning into Cloud Service Providers

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

telecomOver the past years, Telecom carriers and service providers have suffered economic pressures, competition, churn and declining revenue. As they grapple to find ways to improve their ARPU from their core services, many in the Telco industry are attempting to diversify into broader business and consumer value-added services, moving beyond the increasingly commoditized telephone and Internet access. Many of them are planning to or are already expanding aggressively into the “Cloud” space.

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IT Shared Services & Modeling Chargebacks

Saturday, November 7th, 2009

In most organization, the IT function is almost always a key enabler for an effective and efficient running of the business. With the recent credit crunch and economic downturn, many a times, IT departments find themselves in a dilemma. On one hand, they are faced with the need to refresh EOL technologies, expand capacity to support the business or add new assets for new application services required by the business. But on the other hand, they are often forced to cut budgets, headcount freeze, reduction in force, faced with restraint in funding and capital investment for any refresh or expansion. This dilemma pushes IT leaders to begin taking a closer look at the technology services that they are providing to their business units (i.e. internal customers) and evaluating where it makes sense to convert these as Shared Services with chargeback of the costs to the business units.

shared-servicesIT Shared Services refers to the provision of IT services by an IT organization where that service had previously been found in more than one part of the organization or group. Thus the funding and resourcing of the service is shared and the providing department effectively becomes an internal service provider. The key is the idea of ’sharing’ within an organization or group. Hence, the concept of IT Shared Services is similar to collaboration. IT Shared Services is different from the diametrically opposite model of Outsourcing which is where an external third party is paid to provide a service that was previously internal to the buying organization, typically leading to redundancies and re-organization. One purpose of Shared Services is the convergence and streamlining of an organization’s functions to ensure that they deliver to the organization the services required of them as effectively and efficiently as possible. This concept is applicable not just for the IT services, but can also involve the centralizing of back office functions such as HR, Finance, and middle or front offices.

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RESTful APIs for Cloud

Monday, October 12th, 2009

Over the past month, I have put together some thoughts around the components that should make up the composition of a Cloud Computing service, from a service producer’s perspective, in what I termed as the Big Picture.  That posting can be found here and a more extended description posted on my web page here.

For this week, I’d like to shift my focus on some of the ingredients that make up the Cloud service. Lets start peeling off the skin of this onion..

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Governance beyond Uncertainty

Saturday, October 3rd, 2009

I had the privilege to join Sun’s Chief Privacy Officer, who is also our Chief Governance Officer for Cloud Computing, in meetings with some government InfoComm authority folks. The subject of the meetings were Governance for Cloud Computing.

Overall, I thought she did well in covering the key and important points across areas such as legislation / laws and the jurisdictional territories, Standards, data classifications / categories, how to maintain data privacy and security across its lifecycle, IP (Intellectual Property) of third party contents, license rights, policing rights, etc.  The message she brought to the table is that at the end of the day, businesses needs to manage an acceptable equilibrium between gaining the business agility, cost advantages and empowering their business to leverage on available Cloud services, and the acceptable or tolerated level of risks by the business.  It was not an easy subject to talk about (especially in an hour duration).

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An Elephant called Hadoop

Thursday, October 1st, 2009

elephantOne of the technology that is often being evaluated for HPC (High Performance Computing) or Cloud infrastructure is named after a stuffed elephant toy called Hadoop.

Hadoop is actually a framework for distributing data and running applications across a large cluster of servers built on commodity hardware. Today, I’m going to put away my service management, operations, facility hats and put on my old software hat to tell you a little story about this elephant and explain what Hadoop framework is composed of (in a layman’s terms).

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Cloud Computing: The big picture

Monday, September 14th, 2009

McKinsey recently reported that there were at least 22 different cloud definitions in common use.

I believe Cloud Computing is probably the most hyped and misused term in this decade. The cause is mainly because many technology and service providers have hijacked the term and slapped it on their hardware boxes, or software, or services and claimed to be “cloud-enabled” or an “out-of-the-box-cloud” thingy…

In actual fact, Cloud Computing is not a technology revolution. It is not a mixture of server hardware, operating systems, virtualization technologies and application services, but rather a revolution in the way we conduct business and the way that Cloud Computing can allow a business to increase their IT capacity when required, on the fly, and pay for just what is being used.

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Cloud service : where do you start?

Saturday, September 12th, 2009

“Cloud computing is an operational model for enabling convenient, on-demand network access to a shared pool of configurable computing resources that can be rapidly provisioned and released with minimal management effort or service provider interaction.”

- National Institute of Standards and Technology, August 2009

I believe the key words are “operational model“.  In my opinion, cloud computing is the transformation of how we traditionally leverage on technology to support the business. A cloud computing strategy is about identifying and distributing specific, suitable business tasks onto the public and/or private network, using attached compute, storage, and network resources to facilitate more cost effective and responsive services to users.  Regardless the target deployment is to a public cloud, private cloud (in-house or hosted), or hybrid, moving an enterprise’s IT to be a cloud service is a complex transformation that requires fundamental changes to many IT related processes. Organizations should evolve from a state of multiple, disjoint silos with their associated inefficiencies, through increasingly advanced operational models to the cloud.

It is with this goal in mind that Sun Data Center Efficiency Practice, within our Professional Services arm, launched the Cloud Strategic Planning & Analysis service offering a few months ago. The aim is to help our customers get started..

Feel free to have a look at our Solution Brief.

Is it really “low cost”?

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

Someone once remarked that corporations are jumping on to the Cloud Computing bandwagon because they perceive it to be “low cost”. A recent survey of 502 respondents (C-level executives and IT decision-makers across 17 regions in the world) by Avanade shows that nearly two-third of them (worldwide) believes that cloud computing reduces up-front costs.

GoldenGate08

What we should always keep in mind is that there are always two perspectives to the statement. For every cloud services, be it IaaS (Infrastructure as a Service), PaaS (Platform as a Service) or SaaS (Software as a Service), there are two perspectives, namely: (a) The Producer of the service; or (b) The Consumer(s) of the service.

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