MIT: Cloud Computing to Reshape IT

A panel of experts at MIT Sloan CIO Symposium this week said that more companies would look to cloud computing in the near future because of its potential cost savings and its ability to deliver flexible computing.

By Brad Reed
Thu, May 21, 2009

Network World — A panel of experts yesterday said that more companies would look to cloud computing in the near future because of its potential cost savings and its ability to deliver flexible scaling.

Defining Private Clouds, Part One
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Speaking at the MIT Sloan CIO Symposium this week, four panelists described several advantages and potential pitfalls for companies that utilize cloud computing to outsource key IT features. Broadly speaking, cloud computing services use Internet technologies to deliver IT-related capabilities directly to users.

During the panel discussion, Rackspace Cloud General Manager Emil Sayegh described cloud computing as "a set of pooled computing resources that’s powered by software and delivered over the Web."

Cloud computing differs from traditional IT infrastructure because it treats IT more as a utility rather than as a piece of dedicated physical infrastructure that must be managed and upgraded internally.

Ed Bugnion, who currently serves as the CTO of Cisco’s Server Access and Virtualization Business Unit, said that cloud computing technology is still “nascent” but that it “is something that has tremendous growth potential… it’s basically a transformation from IT in data centers to more virtualized technology.”

Ron Markezich, the corporate vice president for Microsoft Online, said that cloud computing would give IT customers a new business model where “they don’t have to worry about upgrades and capital for hardware” since those upgrades would be provided over the Web by the service providers. This, in turn, would save companies’ IT departments both time and money and would allow IT departments the flexibility to assign their top workers to more high-value tasks.

“The benefits of cloud computing start and end with the dollars you can save,” he said. “But it can also help getting your best people away from working in areas that can be outsourced to the cloud. This way you can allow your best people to focus on an area that drives differentiation for your company.

”The other big virtue of cloud computing, agreed the panelists, was its ability to provide flexibility in scaling beyond what standard dedicated infrastructure could provide. Because cloud services are virtualized and delivered over the Internet, users can more easily increase or decrease capacity depending on their current needs. Thus, said Sayegh, companies using cloud computing wouldn’t have to spend additional money deciding how much new capacity they need to build out.

“We’re seeing more and more user cases where they’re starting new projects and they find a lack of predictability of how much capacity they’re going to need,” he explained. “That gets expensive very quickly… the advantage of cloud computing is that you can turn over the keys and forget all the issues with scaling.

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