Microsoft, IBM, Cisco Unite To Make Cloud More Accessible

A new industry coalition comprising the likes of Cisco Systems, IBM, EMC and Microsoft will try to remove some of the key barriers for enterprises looking to embrace cloud computing.

At the Management World Americas conference in Orlando, Fla., 8 Dec, the industry group TM Forum announced the creation of the ECBC (Enterprise Cloud Buyers Council), part of a larger initiative designed to create an ecosystem of the largest IT vendors and telecommunications companies in the cloud services space.

The ECBC is tasked with understanding the needs of the largest enterprises and addressing the top challenges to adopting a cloud computing model.

Industry analysts are expecting cloud computing to rapidly grow in importance as businesses look for ways to improve their delivery of services while reducing IT capital and operational costs. Research firm Gartner in March predicted that global cloud services revenue will grow to more than $56.3 billion (£35bn) this year—compared to $46.4 billion in 2008—and increase to $150.1 billion in 2013.

That said, there are several issues that will hold back adoption until they’re addressed. Forrester Research said in a report this month that in a survey of businesses in North America and Europe, 49 percent of respondents from enterprises and 51 from SMBs said security and privacy concerns were the primary reasons for not using cloud computing.

“The demand for cloud services holds significant potential for the industry, and it’s just at the start of its evolution,” Keith Willetts, chairman and CEO of TM Forum, said in a statement. “However, there are a number of barriers that must be overcome before cloud can become a mass-market success.”

Included in the ECBC are Alcatel-Lucent, Amdocs, AT&T, British Telecom, CA, Hewlett-Packard, Nokia Siemens Networks, Telecom Italia and Telstra. Also participating are industry organisations DMTF (Distributed Management Task Force) and itSMF (Information Technology Senior Management Forum), as well as enterprise buyers Commonwealth Bank of Australia and Deutsche Bank.

The group will work to understand the needs of enterprise buyers and will launch specific work programs to address various issues, including cloud security issues, cloud-to-cloud interoperability, and cloud network performance and latency issues.

In a report 1 Dec, Gartner analysts said that through at least 2012, organisations will spend more money on private cloud deployments than on putting workloads on public clouds, such as Amazon’s EC2 (Elastic Compute Cloud).

Eventually businesses will use a combination of the two in a hybrid cloud fashion, the analysts said.

Jeffrey Burt

Jeffrey Burt is a senior editor for eWEEK and contributor to TechWeekEurope

Recent Posts

Spyware Maker NSO Group Found Liable In US Court

Landmark ruling finds NSO Group liable on hacking charges in US federal court, after Pegasus…

15 hours ago

Microsoft Diversifying 365 Copilot Away From OpenAI

Microsoft reportedly adding internal and third-party AI models to enterprise 365 Copilot offering as it…

16 hours ago

Albania Bans TikTok For One Year After Stabbing

Albania to ban access to TikTok for one year after schoolboy stabbed to death, as…

16 hours ago

Foldable Shipments Slow In China Amidst Global Growth Pains

Shipments of foldable smartphones show dramatic slowdown in world's biggest smartphone market amidst broader growth…

17 hours ago

Google Proposes Remedies After Antitrust Defeat

Google proposes modest remedies to restore search competition, while decrying government overreach and planning appeal

17 hours ago

Sega Considers Starting Own Game Subscription Service

Sega 'evaluating' starting its own game subscription service, as on-demand business model makes headway in…

18 hours ago