We need to have end users involved from the get go.
gm
JP Morgenthal wrote:
> I believe there are those that will benefit immediately from
> participating in this effort and there are those that want the
> opportunity to contribute, but who's daily efforts do not allow them
> to participate deeply in these efforts. To that end, I recommend that
> there be a core group, probably made up mostly of vendors and
> implementers and then a secondary group of reviewers.
>
> It will be up to the core group to manage how large the review group
> gets since they will have to process the feedback.
>
> Thoughts? Flames?
>
> JP
> -----------------------------------------------
> JP Morgenthal
> cell :
703-554-5301
> email:
jpmorg...@gmail.com <mailto:
jpmorg...@gmail.com>
> email:
m...@jpmorgenthal.com <mailto:
m...@jpmorgenthal.com>
> twitter:
www.twitter.com/jpmorgenthal
> <
http://www.twitter.com/jpmorgenthal>
> blog:
www.jpmorgenthal.com/morgenthal
> <
http://www.jpmorgenthal.com/morgenthal>
>
>
> On Mon, Feb 9, 2009 at 2:36 PM, Reuven Cohen <
r...@enomaly.com
> <mailto:
r...@enomaly.com>> wrote:
>
> I'd like to thank everyone who has recently joined the CCIF
> discussion group. I won't respond directly to all the messages,
> but I will state that I too believe that open standards are the
> only way that cloud will be truly successful.
>
> In regards to the last few posts, the one thing I keep hearing
> over and over are the bits and pieces of what we're trying to do
> that have already been created to some degree. I think one of the
> things that the CCIF as well as our events have provided to the
> broader cloud computing community is an open dialog between the
> "established powers" and the new generation of provocateurs
> (myself included). This group is a perfect example consisting of a
> variety of companies and individuals from almost all aspects of
> the cloud / IT industry, big and small. I can't help but think
> that traditionally the development of standards and related
> protocols (open or closed) has been an exclusive club limited to
> only the largest companies who were able to pay to play. What the
> emergence of the cloud and related social technologies has given
> us the ability to do is publicly iterate on the development of
> standards. What used to take years now can happen in days. (
> Jayshree Ullal <
http://www.aristanetworks.com/jayshree/blog>
> comments about the advancements made in 'cloud networking' are
> perfect -- "more has been achieved in the last 100 days of Cloud
> Networking than is possible in 100 weeks")
>
> Jesse Silver, Dave Neilsen, John Willis, Sam Charrington and few
> others suggested we create a working group to help drive the
> conversations forward. I agree, I feel we need to start working on
> something that may not be perfect, but instead is something that
> actually starts to take shape in a functional form. So my
> question to the group is rather then continually talk about the
> opportunities (past, present and future). Why don't we instead
> start to do something about it, something tangible, something we
> can achieve in the next 100 days.
>
> If you're interested in getting involved, we've created a google
> code group at
http://code.google.com/p/unifiedcloud/ for this very
> reason. I invite anyone who is interested in getting involved to
> send me your email address and I'll make sure you're added as a
> contributor on our google code site.
>
> Reuven
> CCIF Instigator
>
www.cloudforum.org <
http://www.cloudforum.org>
>
>
>
>
>
> >