| By Dustin Amrhein | Article Rating: |
|
| December 13, 2009 12:15 PM EST | Reads: |
4,633 |
Early Bird Savings for Cloud Expo
Defining cloud computing has proven to be nearly impossible. Ask ten different people and you'll get ten different answers. Countless discussion groups, blogs, articles, etc. have attempted to give their own take on cloud computing, and all to no avail. The industry just can't agree on a common definition. With that in mind, perhaps it's time to move past trying to define the cloud and look into the common characteristics of such solutions.
Many of us have heard or read about some of these cloud characteristics, so I thought I would offer up my top five cloud computing solution characteristics here.
Shared, virtualized infrastructure: At the heart of cloud computing is one of its key technological enablers, virtualization. Virtualization provides a path to share pools of IT resources such as servers, storage, data, and more. By virtualizing and sharing such resources, higher utilization rates can be realized. Effectively, more can be done with less, or more can be done with existing resources.
Self-service access: Cloud computing solutions should enable self-service capabilities to their users. The days of human-driven resource provisioning requests are replaced by some type of portal, usually web-based, that allows authorized users to directly access compute resources based on their need.
Elastic resource pools: Whether cloud computing concepts are being applied to a set of servers, blocks of storage, or shards of data, the resource pool should be elastic. This means that as more resource is needed, the system provisions more from the pool to ensure demand is met. Conversely, and just as importantly, when a resource is no longer needed it should be returned to the pool. This dynamic growth and contraction should be carried out autonomically based on parameters defined by users of the cloud.
Consumable output: Once the resources are provisioned by the cloud, they should be as close to “ready-to-go” as possible. Configuration, tuning, and integration should be handled by the cloud computing solution where possible allowing users to derive immediate value from the provisioned components.
User-based usage tracking: This feature is really a need created by the first characteristic mentioned. If the cloud is offering up shared resource pools, it is necessary to understand who is using those resources and how much they are using. Cloud computing solutions should provide a way to allocate usage of its resources to a particular user or group of users in order to facilitate chargeback within a business.
By coming up with a set of characteristics that define cloud computing solutions, users are armed with a list of criteria when they begin looking to the cloud. Also, characteristics seem easier to agree upon than a precise definition. The above list is not meant to be exhaustive, nor is it meant to represent the most important characteristics for every user or use case. I'm interested to hear what others have to say about important cloud computing characteristics, so let me know what you think.
Published December 13, 2009 Reads 4,633
Copyright © 2009 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
Related Stories
More Stories By Dustin Amrhein
Dustin has held various jobs in software design and development including web-based application development, distributed system infrastructure development, and Web 2.0 runtime architecture design. In his current role, Dustin is a technical evangelist for IBM emerging technologies in the WebSphere portfolio. Follow him on Twitter @damrhein and visit the IBM WebSphere emerging technologies page.
The views and opinions expressed on this page are Dustin's own and do not necessarily reflect the beliefs, views, or strategies of his employer, IBM.
- Forget Defining Cloud Computing
- Introducing WebSphere CloudBurst 1.1
- Cloud Computing Wish List For 2010
- Declarative Programming in the Cloud
- Is WebSphere CloudBurst Right for You?
- Reporting for the Cloud
- IBM and the Air Force Sign Cloud Deal
- Security Isn't the Biggest Obstacle of Cloud Computing
- What Does Elastic Really Mean?
- Improving Virtualization with Standards and Interoperability
- The Appliance Form Factor of WebSphere CloudBurst
- Forget Defining Cloud Computing
- Introducing WebSphere CloudBurst 1.1
- Cloud Computing Wish List For 2010
- Cloud Computing and Virtual Images
- Important Considerations to Build Cloud Computing Apps
- The Enterprise Cloud Buyers Council
- IBM's Smarter Cloud
- Declarative Programming in the Cloud
- Is WebSphere CloudBurst Right for You?
- Reporting for the Cloud
- IBM and the Air Force Sign Cloud Deal
- Security Isn't the Biggest Obstacle of Cloud Computing
- Forget Defining Cloud Computing
- Should Developers Care About Cloud Computing?
- Bringing Cloud Computing to SOA
- IBM & Cloud Computing: How WebSphere CloudBurst Delivers Consumability
- IBM & Cloud Computing: Self-Service Clouds with Fine-Grained Control
- Five Reasons to Choose a Private Cloud
- SOA in the Cloud: The Cloud of Services
- Five Ways Cloud Computing Strengthens IT
- What's in a Cloud Appliance?
- IBM Announces New Cloud Offerings
- Confronting The Culture of Cloud Computing
- WebSphere CloudBurst in Test Organizations



















