McKinsey, that fine think tank of intellectuals recently dubbed cloud computing as not making sense -thus trying to throttle in its infancy a paradigm that could make companies across the world more competitive than they are today by helping cut costs precisely when they need it the most. The attempt to paint virtualization rather than remote computing is another attempt to cloud the air rather than clear the air on cloud computing. Most consulting companies would have pointed out industry affiliations and disclaimers on which companies they are representing or have represented.
Read other comments at the NYT article
http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/04/15/when-cloud-computing-doesnt-make-sense/
Its study uses Amazon.com’s Web service offering as the price of outsourced cloud computing, since its service is the best-known and it publishes its costs. On that basis, according to McKinsey, the total cost of the data center functions would be $366 a month per unit of computing output, compared with $150 a month for the conventional data center. “The industry has assumed the financial benefits of cloud computing and, in our view, that’s a faulty assumption,” said Will Forrest, a principal at McKinsey, who led the study.
http://www.decisionstats.com/2009/04/mckinsey-attacks-cloud-computing-having-no-sense/
My take on this is here-
Cloud computing will have lower costs as economies of scale kick in, as they did for nearly all technologies. McKinsey partners must be having a hard time to meet their annual bonuses if they have not factored this basic assumption in their cost projections. Cloud computing just converts this to a mass infrastructure from the present scenario where you pay annual licenses for software that you use for less than 60 % in a day, and hardware that you find obsolete in 3-4 years, which is off course gives accountants a reason to help you with depreciation and tax benefits. Rent a computer in the sky is simpler - and you would not need any consultant to help advise what configuration you need.
Mckinsey has deep touches with the outsourcing industry in India from their seminal paper in 1999, to their first concept Knowledge center that helped start it, to their alumni across the outsourcing sector which satisfy a mutual symbiotic relationship particularly in business research. Cloud computing actually help with virtual teams - no need for server farms, IT bureaucracies and Indian outsourcing can actually reduce a lot of costs along with American direct users. The intermediaries and consultants would be affected the most.
Indeed I am speaking on the Cloud Slam 09, precisely on how cloud computing can help lower the digital divide by giving high power computing to anyone having a thin shell laptop with a browser. Developing countries need access to HPC to better plan their resources and growth in an environmentally optimized manner.
I sorry you don't like their conclusions, but you would more effective
challenging their assumptions, data, or logic. Attacking the author
isn't good a way to advance an argument.
Your argument is thaten cloud computing will have lower costs when the
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“I am looking for
people interested in creating a "Private Cloud" that meets the requirements
for a Fortune 50 company. This is the market that has not recieved much
attention from anyone. I have some good ideas, and the bright minds here can
only make them better.”
Really? This is what just about every hosting
company is doing. “Private Clouds” aren’t much more than virtualization
(previously grid computing), when you get down to it, and you’d be hard pressed
to find a hosting company that isn’t already doing this for small, medium, and
large companies (and local, state, and federal government).
Amazon
EC2 and the like can’t possibly survive given the current pricing models, and
it’s refreshing to see a report finally say so.
I think you can make the case that McKinsey's recommendation to go for
server virtualization now isn't in conflict with this. The vast majority
of internal clouds will use virtual servers, so any work put into server
virtualization now will payback later when internal clouds are something
that they can implement.
--
Nik Simpson
As the McKinsey study, give 'em hell for reporting the truth.
Jim Starkey wrote:
> Reality check: Amazon has raised the price for four core instances from
> $.70 to $.80 an hour.
>
> So I guess you're faulting McKinsey for using Amazon's prices to
> evaluate the cost of Amazon's service. Yup, definitely a sign of bias.
>
>
>
From: "Pietrasanta, Mark" <Mark.Pie...@aquilent.com>
To: "cloud-c...@googlegroups.com" <cloud-c...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Thursday, April 16, 2009 9:14:43 AM
Subject: [ Cloud Computing ] Re: McKinsey Clears Air on Cloud Computing- Says Amazon is twice as expensive
“I am looking for people interested in creating a "Private Cloud" that meets the requirements for a Fortune 50 company. This is the market that has not recieved much attention from anyone. I have some good ideas, and the bright minds here can only make them better.”
Really? This is what just about every hosting company is doing. “Private Clouds” aren’t much more than virtualization (previously grid computing), when you get down to it, and you’d be hard pressed to find a hosting company that isn’t already doing this for small, medium, and large companies (and local, state, and federal government).
I am not sure how many have seen the actual presentation….here it is….
Their case based on ONE public cloud provider is almost laughable. The only thing I agree with them is the 20+ definitions of clouds.
Okay, that clarifies that you’re looking for a SaaS/hosted application offering, not simply a private cloud. (Of course, everything and anything is apparently a cloud nowadays…)
Look at slide 24: It assumes typical CPU/month cost for 3GHz dual-core Xeon Windows-based server. Sure this cost is lower. Then it assumes the 100% of the data center is moved to AWS. This is not something to do.
The Private Clouds do appear on slide 30. McKinsey dismisses them as “Publicly-announced private clouds are essentially an aggressive virtualization program on top of the traditional enterprise IT stack”
If they did not like any cloud definition, why they don’t make one definition themselves?
And if they have no cloud definition at all to work with, what do they analyze? Something they don’t know if it is a cloud or not?
Miha
No virus
found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 8.5.287 / Virus Database: 270.11.58/2062 - Release Date: 04/16/09
16:38:00
No, they’re more expensive than any other model you can put together, and they have no SLA to speak of.
From: cloud-c...@googlegroups.com [mailto:cloud-c...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Ray Nugent
Sent: Thursday, April 16, 2009 8:08 PM
To: cloud-c...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: McKinsey overlooked the Private Cloud Re: [ Cloud Computing ] Re: McKinsey Clears Air on Cloud Computing- Says Amazon is twice as expensive
The fact of the matter is they have a thriving business because they provide use cases that make economic sense for a certain market. Your argument has been consistently "they're more expensive
than colo" and, in one use case, your right. CPU to CPU costs. However, the intrinsic value of cloud computing is "on demand". This is not unlike the trends in manufacturing in the 1980's that emphasised just in time material delivery. Why take posetion of
something and pay for it while it sits idle? That's what you do in 'every other hosting model". So, if one was to move an entire enterprise dataceneter into the cloud, CPU for CPU, that would certainly cost more. However, if one where to do so and leverage
an on demand useage modle, eliminating over provisioning and reducimg costs to deploy and surrender machines their costs would drop considerably from a traditional physical datacenetr model.
Ray
From: "Pietrasanta, Mark" <Mark.Pie...@aquilent.com>
To: "cloud-c...@googlegroups.com" <cloud-c...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Thursday, April 16, 2009 4:00:58 PM
Subject: RE: McKinsey overlooked the Private Cloud Re: [ Cloud Computing ] Re: McKinsey Clears Air on Cloud Computing- Says Amazon is twice as expensive
It has nothing to do with “wishing”. It has to do with them charging multiple times what any other hosting model costs. There is no way that can survive. Either they change their pricing model, or they fade away. Simple economics.
From: cloud-c...@googlegroups.com [mailto:cloud-c...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Ray Nugent
Sent: Thursday, April 16, 2009 5:43 PM
To: cloud-c...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: McKinsey overlooked the Private Cloud Re: [ Cloud Computing ] Re: McKinsey Clears Air on Cloud Computing- Says Amazon is twice as expensive
That's a pretty bold statement given they have been more than surviving for almost three years. Just because you wish they would fail doesn't mean they will. - Ray
"Amazon EC2 and the like can’t possibly survive given the current pricing models, and it’s refreshing to see a report finally say so."
From: "Pietrasanta, Mark" <Mark.Pie...@aquilent.com>
To: "cloud-c...@googlegroups.com" <cloud-c...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Thursday, April 16, 2009 2:24:33 PM
Subject: RE: McKinsey overlooked the Private Cloud Re: [ Cloud Computing ] Re: McKinsey Clears Air on Cloud Computing- Says Amazon is twice as expensive
“Mark, 100% agreed. McKinsey completely overlook the private cloud. Here are my calculations, based on McKinseyr supplied data:
McKinsey, which claims, based on
Amazon.com cost studies, that data center traditional is more than half price the cloud computing alternative via Amazon .com ($150 per month per unit for data center vs $366 per month per unit for Amazon virtual cloud)
However, there is a couple of details here: <snip>”
Except that ignores the “private cloud” hosting facility. They have similar abilities to offer short-term additional capacity. And they typically do it at a fraction of the cost of Amazon EC2. Not in the exact same manner, but it’s close enough. And it’s even better if you’re hosting with them to begin with.
I don’t own, sell, or promote any hosting business. Frankly, I find most of them to be simply (often annoying) vendors selling commoditized solutions. But the reality is, many/most of them have moved to virtualization, and many of them have some sort of shared offering. While it’s likely not at the same scale as EC2, it certainly is good enough for most people under most circumstances, and the pricing tends to be much more in-line with what you’d expect/want.
I guess I don’t see any additional value in something like Amazon EC2 over smaller private virtualized environments. I think “cloud computing” as a whole will go beyond simply “perceived infinite capacity with instant provisioning” virtualized environments, but right now that’s all they seem to be, including EC2.
And there are far cheaper ways to achieve that same end goal, no matter what use-case you want to throw at it.
From: "Pietrasanta, Mark" <Mark.Pie...@aquilent.com>
To: "cloud-c...@googlegroups.com" <cloud-c...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Thursday, April 16, 2009 9:14:43 AM
Subject: [ Cloud Computing ] Re: McKinsey Clears Air on Cloud Computing- Says Amazon is twice as expensive
“I am looking for people interested in creating a "Private Cloud" that meets the requirements for a Fortune 50 company. This is the market
that has not recieved much attention from anyone. I have some good ideas, and the bright minds here can only make them better.”
Really? This is what just about every hosting company is doing. “Private Clouds” aren’t much more than virtualization (previously grid computing), when you get down to it, and you’d be hard pressed to find a hosting
company that isn’t already doing this for small, medium, and large companies (and local, state, and federal government).
Amazon EC2 and the like can’t possibly survive given the current pricing models, and it’s refreshing to see a report finally say so.
On Thu, Apr 16, 2009 at 10:40 AM, Jim Starkey <jsta...@nimbusdb.com> wrote:
They did, their definition is:
Clouds are hardware-based services offering compute, network and storage capacity where:
▪ Hardware management is highly abstracted from the buyer
▪ Buyers incur infrastructure costs as variable OPEX
▪ Infrastructure capacity is highly elastic (up or down)
- Randall
| Personally I think the definition, and top down vs. bottom's up
convergence framework makes sense. What is not well discussed are the
key drivers. Greater variable/fixed costs, SAAS plug and play, and IT
self-service will be key factors to roadmap decisions in my view. .IT
needs to be pervasive, highly agile, and yet well managed. Its all
about making money and being better. The cloud fits into a list of strategic options, not the other way around. Mike Michael Grove 650-346-8059(M) michae...@collabworks.com www.collabworks.com --- On Fri, 4/17/09, jgb...@gmail.com <jgb...@gmail.com> wrote: |
|