Cloud computing‘s software-as-a-service model may one day dominate the world of IT, but across the vast expanse of the world’s IT departments, that morning hasn’t yet seen its dawn.
For all its efficiency, cost savings and centralised control, SAAS hasn’t yet convinced most of the world’s IT decision makers that it is worth a leap of faith.
“Companies are going to go with what works. If a client-server system installed seven years ago still works and gets the job done, they will stay with it but keep a close eye on it at the same time. If the budget opens up, a refresh is needed and the tech is there, then they may make a change. But the conditions all have to be right,” he said.
IT leaders express continuing reservations about data security, 24/7 access to data in a public cloud, and whether a provider will still be here years from now. If it’s outside the firewall, it’s not completely controllable, and IT managers tend to like complete control.
But over the long haul, this hesitation due to skepticism should work out to be a good thing. It is giving software developers and SAAS providers more time to innovate, work out bugs and prepare a better overall product.
For instance, in 2009, companies considering Amazon’s IAAS (infrastructure as a service) EC2 (Elastic Compute Cloud) had to worry about the service’s lack of PCI compliance. In 2010, a newly PCI-compliant EC2 meant that Amazon’s service switched from being a PCI liability to being a potential compliance solution.
Along similar lines, new SAAS-based product offerings are now moving out to what was just a short time ago uncharted waters, for example, cloud-hosted “big-data” analytics, e-discovery, and in one of the areas of computing most closely associated with on-premises solutions, the hosting of individual desktop systems.
Is SAAS VDI (virtual desktop infrastructure) the missing link in getting virtual desktops off the corporate wish list and into regular use? The enterprise client-server system may have run its course with Win 7, and VDI has been a tantalising alternative for about 12 years. Large new deployments by Lawrence Livermore Laboratory, GE and Wells Fargo indicate that big enterprises are now buying into this. What does the future hold?
How many IT managers would relish the prospect of outsourcing Windows-based client-server desktops to a hosted service that knew what it was doing? This represents nirvana for a lot of people.
The space gained some added gravitas when IBM came into the picture in January 2011 with its own VDI package. Because it needed to include mainframes within the solution, it required about two years to do all its quality-assurance testing and determine best practices. Finally, Big Blue’s Virtual Desktop for Smart Business launched on 24 January.
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