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November 20th, 2009

Who's afraid of the big bad cloud?

Posted by Christopher Dawson @ 9:27 pm

Categories: General

Tags: Google Inc., Tech New, Data Center Virtualization, Software As A Service (SaaS), Linux, Cloud Computing, Operating Systems, Storage, Hardware, Data Centers

Tech news has been dominated this week by Google’s announcements regarding their upcoming Chrome OS. Plenty of geeks are excited at the prospect of a lightweight, user-friendly, Linux-based operating system that, if only on the basis of brand cache, can be a potential Windows competitor in some important sub-markets. Plenty of industry insiders and business analysts are excited at the revenue potential for Google and new levels of competition. You know who aren’t excited? Those who say we aren’t ready for an OS dependent upon “The Cloud” (dramatic music plays here).

These are the same people who regularly stop by my ZDNet Education posts and can’t believe my affection for Google Apps or my willingness to use a student information system that’s hosted in the cloud. “Why wouldn’t you run the system on your own servers? Why would you run mission-critical mail and communications in the cloud? Why would you let your student data sit somewhere else?”

Uhhhh…because my time should be spent on my real business (in my case, integrating technology into education and ensuring that teachers have the data and resources they need to do their own jobs), not running servers when Google can do it infinitely better than I can or when other SaaS vendors can leverage large virtualized data centers to deliver high quality services to me quickly and with minimal intervention on my part.

This isn’t just about Google and Chrome, though (although they are very much at the center of this issue). Brian Chen of Wired, is, not surprisingly, talking about the Chrome OS when he asks,

The idea is such: Give up the computing experience you’ve grown accustomed to for over a decade. Come live in Google’s browser.

Why would anyone wish to do that today, tomorrow or even next year when the OS ships?

This is a typical, narrow view of the cloud. Maybe he hasn’t noticed, but for those of us who use a smartphone more than a PC or a web browser more than any other software (this includes a lot of people, by the way; trust me - I’m not writing this in Word), we’ve already given up our turn-of-the-millennium computing experience. Quite happily, I might add.

The cloud, if we choose to use it as such, even allows us to deliver much of that old-school computing experience through application and desktop virtualization. You don’t have to use Google Apps to embrace the cloud. IBM’s Client for Smart Work can be deployed over the cloud, providing a full desktop experience with a simple piece of client software. Citrix XenApp just needs a browser to deliver whatever desktop applications you need. Obviously, we’re not talking AutoCAD or Adobe Premiere here, but desktop productivity is a piece of cake, all within a browser window.

As Virtual Bridges (a maker of light VDI software) puts it,

By making these desktops “virtual”, a user can access the same desktop environment whether they are at home, the office, the road or anywhere where there is a machine connected to the network.

By consolidating these desktop sessions onto centrally-managed servers, users no longer have to self-maintain their desktops or put unnecessary burdens on the Help Desk. This means literally putting your desktops in the data center and allowing access to them securely over the network. Accessing your personal desktop is as easy as accessing a web page.

Obviously, Virtual Bridges has a vested interest in getting businesses to use cloud-based virtual environments. And yet, these are proven technologies dating back to the good old days of VNC (which, not surprisingly, is still around). It’s just relatively recent advances in hardware speed, network performance, and software sophistication that have finally allowed really significant scalability and delivery of environments like IBM’s Smart Work Client or SIMtone’s Universal Cloud Computing.

Whichever way you head, whether using virtualization in the cloud or using cloud applications and storage like Google Docs and Zoho, cloud detractors need to wake up and smell the Internet. They ask why I would trust my data to the likes of Google or IBM; I ask why I’d entrust sensitive data to a user with a laptop.


Instead of cursing our hyperconnected society, let’s leverage all that connectivity. Leave your thumb drives for other interesting pursuits, leave spinning hard drives to be someone else’s failures, and use the cloud wherever it makes sense. Don’t trust Google? How about IBM or Amazon? For that matter, it isn’t all that hard, especially for organizations with substantial IT resources, to host their own clouds.

Who’s afraid of the big bad cloud? A lot of people. I however, am not one of them. Seriously…bring it on. I’m more than happy to pay someone to handle my IT administrivia for me so that I can focus on adding real value to my organization. I’ll gladly let Google (or whomever) put out my brushfires. I just want to get to work which, in this evolving “creativity economy“, does not mean troubleshooting Exchange servers and reimaging desktops.

Christopher Dawson

Chris Dawson writes ZDNet's Education IT blog. Follow Chris Dawson on Twitter! Christopher Dawson is the technology director for the Athol-Royalston School District in northern Massachusetts and a member of the Internet Press Guild. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations, but always keep in mind that the opinions expressed here are his own and not those of his daytime employer, even if he talks incessantly about his day job.

Email Christopher Dawson

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Explaining everything away as "emotion" makes you right. Got it.  CobraA1 | 11/21/09
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You seem ill-informed  FanaticGeek | 11/24/09
RE: Who's afraid of the big bad cloud?  ultramo | 11/21/09
RE: Who's afraid of the big bad cloud?  CairbreUK | 11/21/09
If google can...  bjbrock | 11/21/09
re:If google can...  n0neXn0ne | 11/21/09
Well, for sure, it is getting a lot easier to run a school's IT,  DonnieBoy | 11/21/09
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I agree.  bendib | 11/21/09
Actually, it will take market share from mostly Windows. I will not use it  DonnieBoy | 11/21/09
Thank you Donnie  NStalnecker | 11/22/09
Man, do not insult the ZDNet readers, I would imagine that a small minority  DonnieBoy | 11/22/09
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Yea, Yea, the greasy Windows stooges always claim 100% uptime.  DonnieBoy | 11/23/09
The best data centers...  bjbrock | 11/22/09
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Reply please Donnieboy  LWEM | 11/23/09
I agree with LWEM  GuidingLight | 11/23/09
Better, please respond: How much money has Microsoft made using Windows to  DonnieBoy | 11/23/09
LMAO  NStalnecker | 11/22/09
If you would take a second or two, you would realize that ChromeOS is open  DonnieBoy | 11/22/09
The desktop isn't going away.  bjbrock | 11/22/09
No, not going away, the delivery method is just changing. We will soon  DonnieBoy | 11/22/09
TS CAL's are expensive.  bjbrock | 11/22/09
In defense of the author  aktazdevil | 11/23/09
Desktop Applications Work Better  Tom12Tom | 11/21/09
Yes, and and, they said that assembly language was faster than Fortran too.  DonnieBoy | 11/21/09
actually . . .  CobraA1 | 11/21/09
Well, assembly language is ONLY used in the most critical spots like  DonnieBoy | 11/21/09
Not really a race . . .  CobraA1 | 11/21/09
Well, I remember how "reckless" it was to let those PCs into businesses.  DonnieBoy | 11/21/09
In 5 maybe 10 years.  Bruizer | 02/01/10
YES!! Very soon, most typical users will be able to live 100% in the cloud.  DonnieBoy | 11/21/09
able to != optimal  CobraA1 | 11/21/09
Well, yes, it will be optimal, considering the cost of desktops.  DonnieBoy | 11/21/09
thoughts  CobraA1 | 11/21/09
re: thoughts  n0neXn0ne | 11/21/09
Canadian? happy (nt)  Economister | 11/21/09
Why do Canadians do it doggie style??  DonnieBoy | 11/21/09
re: Canadian? Negative ...  n0neXn0ne | 11/21/09
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RE: Who's afraid of the big bad cloud?  wizard57m@... | 11/21/09
This rant ...  n0neXn0ne | 11/21/09
The CEO does NOT trust the gearheads that take a shower once a month, and  DonnieBoy | 11/21/09
Wow man  NStalnecker | 11/21/09
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Well good then  NStalnecker | 11/21/09
Google will NOT be the only provider, or even the biggest for that matter  DonnieBoy | 11/22/09
Your prescious Windows will be history  Use_More_OIL_NOW | 11/21/09
Well, without all of the duct tape and bailing wire Windows installations,  DonnieBoy | 11/21/09
What the hell are you talking about?  John Zern | 11/21/09
Maybe you did not notice, but, virtually all the big boys run Linux on the  DonnieBoy | 11/21/09
Who are these "big boys" that you speak of?  GuidingLight | 11/23/09
The big boys are Amazon, eTrade, Yahoo (bsd), Facebook, Linkedin, BestBuy,  DonnieBoy | 11/23/09
Try the Fortune 500, where IIS is more commonly used than apache  connor33 | 11/24/09
Another "Year of Linux" -LOL!  Tom12Tom | 11/21/09
Spoken like an unemployed linux admin.  John Zern | 11/21/09
The same reasons people drive to work over public transportation  Pliny the Elder | 11/21/09
True, but when  Economister | 11/22/09
The buses use those same roads  Pliny the Elder | 11/22/09
Yep, you get it 100%.  Bruizer | 11/23/09
I don't see how anyone can be so excited  NStalnecker | 11/21/09
This is all open source. That means ANYBODY can copy it and make their own  DonnieBoy | 11/22/09
Welcome to Googleland, Chris  Userama | 11/22/09
message pending deletion.  n0neXn0ne | 11/22/09
The cloud is totaly awesome  LWEM | 11/23/09
Security is a process and it goes for the Cloud as well  D-T-Schmitz | 11/23/09
I, for one, welcome our new cloud overlords  lehnerus2000 | 11/23/09
Why are IT Folk  People | 11/23/09
The cloud is awesom...  Grayson Peddie | 11/23/09
I have to add  NStalnecker | 11/23/09
And when someone's information is exposed  No_Ax_to_Grind | 11/23/09
Perhaps you should contact LA.  B.O.F.H. | 11/23/09
RE: Who's afraid of the big bad cloud?  jprescott12@... | 11/23/09
What if you want off the Internet?  brantmessenger | 11/23/09
Then  NStalnecker | 11/23/09
The Internet is never "always on." The cloud has no silver lining  BillDem | 11/23/09
Relevant Simpsons reference  Churlish | 02/01/10
Who was afraid of big successful banks...  Tholian_53 | 11/23/09
Welcome to Cloud Bubble!  brantmessenger | 11/23/09
RE: Who's afraid of the big bad cloud?  Ptrope | 11/23/09
Yes, in "Sub Markets", like Linux netbooks. How did that work out?  Qbt | 11/23/09
RE: Who's afraid of the big bad cloud?  Don Crossland | 11/23/09
RE: Who's afraid of the big bad cloud? Many businesses.  PeterBoyles | 11/23/09
All good points.  Churlish | 02/01/10
Once again it's all about Chris  tonymcs@... | 11/23/09
I am not afraid of the cloud  jorjitop | 11/23/09
Cloud: Yes, Browser Apps: No  nichow | 11/23/09
The cloud is an old paradigm disguised as new  CPPDEV | 11/23/09
Identity theft?  CPPDEV | 11/23/09
They would rather bow down to Google, then use MSFT software  MSFTWorshipper | 11/23/09
I'm afraid of Christopher Dawson  Dan the Digital Dog | 11/23/09
All corporate-sensitive data should be entrutsted to the Google Cloud...  MSFTWorshipper | 11/23/09
digital divide  Lou72 | 11/23/09
Backup the Cloud  wallace_marke@... | 11/23/09
RE: Who's afraid of the big bad cloud?  Rootsid | 11/23/09
My hybrid portable cloud  mheartwood | 11/23/09
Yes you should be afraid  bklooste | 11/23/09
RE: Who's afraid of the big bad cloud?  bhasinusc@... | 11/24/09
Big Brother Google  Tom12Tom | 11/25/09
RE: Who's afraid of the big bad cloud?  Badgered | 02/01/10
It's all about control ...  Golodh2 | 02/02/10

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