• On MovieTome: TRANSFORMERS 2 SPOILERS!
February 7, 2008 9:16 AM PST

The future of the 'cloud,' open source, and the OS

Posted by Gordon Haff
  • Font size
  • Print

When my posting frequency drops a bit, the usual reason is that I'm flying here and yon and otherwise occupied with goings-on at some conference, meeting, or client engagement. The situation in January was a bit different. For the first time in a while, I had some decent blocks of uncommitted time. And I put those to use fleshing out and writing some longer research notes that had been sitting on the to-do list for way too long.

Two of these deal with so-called "cloud computing"--the idea that software will increasingly run in the network. These were originally planned as a single paper, but for structural and length reasons, I decided to break out the definitional piece, "Defining Cloud Computing." To tell the truth, I don't typically find formal taxonomies and categorizations especially interesting, but I thought it useful in this case to be clear about the topic under discussion.

The main research note, "The Cloud vs. Open Source," focuses on the relevancy of open source in a cloud computing world--and, especially, whether other types of protections and rights may not be more important than the right to view, modify, and redistribute source code. Tim O'Reilly has written and spoken on this topic.

At the just-concluded Sun Analyst Summit, I also had the opportunity to broach this topic with Simon Phipps, Sun's Open Source Officer. An interesting perspective that he added is that we're really talking about two different kinds of rights. One is essentially individual--the right for me to decide who can access what "data" that I "own" (whatever those terms mean exactly) and to transfer my data from one place to another. However, there's also the idea of what I'll call community or collective rights--the idea of reciprocal obligations associated with providing application programming interfaces and access.

One follow-up piece that I want to write when I have time will be something along the lines of "Why Not the Cloud?" in which I'll look at some of the inhibitors to moving computing into the network.

Finally, "The Future of the Operating System" looks at how changes in the way that we operate computers and deploy applications is starting to change how we view the operating system, a technology construct that, in important ways, hasn't really changed for decades. Server virtualization is the big driving force behind change here. However, virtualization is hardly unrelated to cloud computing--both through services like Amazon EC2 and, more conceptually, in the fact that virtualization is all about masking lower-level details from users.

These three Illuminata research notes are all available as free samples.

Gordon Haff is a Principal IT Advisor with Illuminata, Inc. and has over 20 years of IT industry experience. He blogs about what's happening with enterprise servers and datacenters, "Yotta-scale" computing, and related software and device trends as part of the CNET Blog Network. Disclosure.
Recent posts from The Pervasive Datacenter
Simplify Creative Commons, don't tweak it
Recovering photos from bad flash memory
The waning of pure play open source
One NEC: It's a start
Supercomputing wrap-up
Are Netbooks real?
The license wars are over
Will Linux ever be a mainstream desktop play?
Add a Comment (Log in or register) 6 comments
by palavering February 7, 2008 11:30 AM PST
in awhile is poor word usage. The correct usage is in a while.
Reply to this comment
by palavering February 7, 2008 11:32 AM PST
in awhile is poor word usage. The correct usage is in a while. Taxonomy and classification are redundant.
Reply to this comment
by ghaff February 7, 2008 10:16 PM PST
Your're correct about "awhile" (fixed). However, taxonomies--at least in the scientific sense--tend to imply a hierarchy of relationships while classifications I think of more like simple buckets. So using both is a stylistic choice--if hardly necessary.
by mvnuestro February 7, 2008 11:45 AM PST
Cloud Computing and virtualization are just new and fancy terms to describe an old adage "the network is the computer".
Reply to this comment
by jdzions February 7, 2008 3:07 PM PST
That wasn't an adage; that was a marketing slogan, and mostly hot air. Cloud computing is an architecture which recognizes that computing systems need to be built like networks are built; geographically distributed, loss-tolerant, scalable, composable. There were computer networks before the IP protocol was invented; they didn't have many of those characteristics, and were thus overtaken by the modern Internet.

The network isn't the computer, and the computer isn't the network. But the computing system and the networking system are built an awful lot alike, and are coupled in interesting ways.
by ghaff February 7, 2008 10:26 PM PST
I'm not sure it's quite fair to call "The Network is the Computer" mostly hot air. Sun was relatively early to recognize the value of networks and (relatively) decentralized computing--at least in a large-scale commercial context. But certainly what we're seeing today is a far more intimate merging with and dependence on the network and the servers behind it by client devices than we've generally seen in the past.

(I also wouldn't really call Cloud Computing an "architecture." Maybe something higher like an approach or a concept. But that's a sematic quibble.)
Reply to this comment
advertisement

In the news now

Slowing expectations at a green-tech start-up

Six months ago, biofuels start-up Mascoma had the wind in its sails, as did the rest of the clean-tech sector. Now, the company is treading carefully and scaling back.


With JavaFX, Sun seeks new coders, new revenue

With the launch of JavaFX 1.0, Sun is trying to reclaim Java's strength as a foundation for rich Internet applications. But it's no longer the incumbent.


Tim Lincecum, motion capture star

San Francisco Giants pitcher, who won the Cy Young award last month, dons a motion capture suit for 2K Sports' Major League Baseball 2K9 video game.


Resource center from CNET News sponsors
Business. Ready.
Sony VAIO® Professional PCs.

Click Here!
A new grade in mobility demands a new kind of notebook. And Sony delivers.Tough, portable and featuring up to 7.5 hours of battery life! VAIO® Professional notebooks are built for business. Learn more.

Click Here!
Built tough for business.

Learn more about the rigorous quality testing Sony puts its notebooks through.

Protect your investment.

Find out why VAIO® tech support recently won a Laptop Editors' Choice Award, July 2008.

Long battery life.

Up to 7.5 hours of battery life! See how VAIO® PCs will keep you productive longer when on the road.

Travel light

Check out our ultraportable line-up, starting at 2.87 lbs.

PCs for every need.

Find out which VAIO® notebook is right for you.

About The Pervasive Datacenter

This blog takes a deep (and often skeptical) look at trends big and small in the world of enterprise servers, datacenters, and "Yotta-scale" computing. This means also taking into account the myriad of software, networks, and devices that are driving change in (or being driven by) these back-end systems.

Gordon Haff is a Principal IT Advisor for Illuminata, Inc. of Nashua, NH. Before becoming an IT industry analyst, Gordon held a variety of product marketing positions at Data General spanning more than a decade. He's programmed for DOS, Windows, and Linux; builds his own PCs; and holds engineering degrees from MIT and Dartmouth, with an MBA from Cornell. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure.

Add this feed to your online news reader

The Pervasive Datacenter topics

advertisement
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right