Hi,
The problems will arise when the bean counters start overriding the engineers on economic grounds that are seen to affect the bottom line.
They had better make sure their PI is upto date, as the ripple down effect of a failure come be quite large.
>>Hi,
>> I see Obama has mandated all departments embrace the cloud. See:-
http://www.partnerpoint.com/News/EntryId/467/Obama-mandates-embrace-of-cloud-computing-for-all-federal-agencies-By-Kenneth-Corbin.aspx>>
>> Due to the infrastructure cost savings there could be a rush to this type of provisioning.
>>
>> The problem I see is of strategic importance, the current model is highly distributed i.e. robust, difficult to take out, where as coalescing
>>the systems into only several data centres is dangerous i.e. it could quite easily be taken out, with major long term disruption to all systems.
>>
>> How does everyone see the future of the cloud.
>
>I find it rather interesting. First computers were all giant machines that cost zillions of dollars - all you got was a terminal. Then computers got cheap and everyone has their own machine holding their own data. Now everyone is going to be buying 'terminals' (i.e., netbooks and internet tablets) and all the data & number crunching will once again be done on the big machines...haha - it's like we've come full circle.
>From a security standpoint I see your point that now you just have one target - but I think Craig pointed out that HOPEFULLY the guru's responsible for the 'cloud' will take precautions.....guess we'll find out soon enough. Any bets on how long it till take before we read about a cloud that got wiped out or all it's data stolen?
Regards N Mc Donald