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Public Teleconferences
Join CIO Executive Council members and participate in the following live teleconferences:
* Planning for Succession:
Models for IT Leadership Development, June 23
* Change Leadership at General Growth Properties: A
Pathways Leadership Development Seminar, June 25
* Managing Change: Centralizing Your IT Organization
July 29
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March 05, 2008 — CIO — Writer Nicholas Carr will earn the enmity of even more tech veterans with his newest prediction: Cloud computing will put most IT departments out of business. "IT departments will have little left to do once the bulk of business computing shifts out of private data centers and into the cloud," Carr writes in his new book, "The Big Switch: Rewiring the World, from Edison to Google."
An exaggeration? Of course. But there's a kernel of truth beneath the hyperbole. Cloud computing, once a concept as murky as its name suggests, is becoming a legitimate emerging technology and piquing the interest of forward-looking CIOs. Out-of-control costs for power, personnel and hardware, limited space in data centers, and above all, a desire to simplify, have encouraged significant numbers of startups—and a still small number of enterprises—to move more infrastructure into a third-party provided cloud.
"The concept of cloud computing makes enormous sense, says André Mendes, the CIO of Special Olympics. "It helps the CIO abstract another layer of complexity from the organization and concentrate on providing the higher levels of value." Mendes, who's now moving much of his data center outside his enterprise via conventional hosting services, says he expects to move toward the cloud in the next few years.
Why now? Enabling technologies, including nearly ubiquitous bandwidth and widespread server virtualization, plus the lessons learned from the rapid ascent of software as a service (SaaS), are encouraging CIOs to think further outside of the data center.
To be sure, it's still the early days of cloud computing. Concerns around security and application latency, to name two of the issues most commonly raised by the IT community, are real. Also, providers have not fully formulated their business and pricing models, which is one reason that some CIOs who did not reap the desired ROI from SaaS now look at cloud computing skeptically. Yet another issue: transparency. Entrusting mission critical applications and data to a third party means the customer has to know exactly how cloud providers handle key security and architectural issues. How transparent providers will be about those details remains an open question.
Unlike many "next big things" cloud computing didn't just spring fully-formed from the brain of a Silicon Valley whiz kid. "It's the logical corollary of what happened in computing over the last 30 years. In a sense, it's a return to the past; time-sharing on steroids," says Mendes.
Just the basics, please. Sometimes we all need a refresher or we need to make sure our team and our colleagues are all on the same page.
Over 25 tutorials on everything from business intelligence to virtualization.