Hey bum, do you remember the Dot Com boom of the mid to late 90's? Every ****** who knew how to open Netscape ran off and pumped their millions into these new fandangled Website-thingys due to it being the next best thing about to take off and radically change the world. Then, do you remember the Dot Com Bust of the early 2000's? It didn't take off as far and fast as hoped an alot of people lost a hell of alot of money. Over the next 10 years or so they have been working out how to make money effectively with this interwebs thingy. I see the same thing happening with this Cloud concept being bandied about.
I'll never say that "Cloud Computing" is going to phase out and disappear, there are still Dot Com websites there long after the bust. More I'm saying that Cloud Computing is another trendy naming fad popping up in alot of IT mags, industry conferences and marketing literature and for the educated people who know what it is and how it works, it really just looks like a good job of marketing smoke and mirrors showing how great the world "could" be.
I hope it works well and I can see a hell of alot of great uses for it. When I see or hear people going on about cloud computing (or the other related "tech jargon" or acronyms for the same thing) it makes me wonder what they think it means.
EG: I once had to install 30 machines in an office and each one was setup with just Windows and MS Office. When it came to Internet Security, the client says "oh no, we get that from the Cloud". In talking further about it they informed me they have another "IT Guru" who will install all of their "Cloud Applications". Wow that sounds pretty cool, I finished up and left. Got called back a month or so later with a few machines doing wierd things and when I got there, their "Cloud Applications" were actually AVG Free, Adobe Reader and Firefox/Thunderbird which were downloaded and installed on each individual machine and using some online backup site (can't recall which) to keep a copy of the files for each separate machine. This client actually pays a guy to provide "Cloud Services" and all this provider does is hook each machine to the net, download and install free software and configure an online backup to be run on each machine sometime between closing time and opening time.
In my opinion, having a service/product/application on the internet available for people to use from any web browser is still just a bloody website, however complex and distributed it may be. As mentioned in earlier posts, it is an awesome way for idiots in marketing to sell the concept to idiots in administration and make the idiots in IT **** around trying to keep it working. All just by calling it "Cloud Computing"....
Tech jargon really ***** me, and I've been in this game for a bloody long time. It causes more harm than good and I can't see the benefit of constantly creating new terms to describe pretty simple concepts and ideas. Anyone remember what TWAIN stands for??
(Don't mind me, I've been away from work for over a week and came back to a steaming, sticky shitpile to sort out, you know the ones that as soon as you touch something in the pile it sticks to something else and within minutes you have several smaller steaming shitpiles and a massive chunk of **** stuck to one hand, and then the phone rings... And I can't have a drink for another 2 hours or so!!) :angry: