Cloud Computing
Cloud Computing
1 Introduction 2
2 3-6
Cloud Computing –The concept
3 History 7-8
4 9
Political Issues
5 Legal Issues 10
6 Component 11-14
7 Architecture 15-17
8 Roles of cloud computing 18-19
9 Conclusion 20-21
Introduction
1
Imagine yourself in the world where the users of the computer of today’s
internet world don’t have to run, install or store their application or data on
their own computers, imagine the world where every piece of your
information or data would reside on the Cloud (Internet).
Cloud computing comes into focus only when you think about what we
always need: a way to increase capacity or add capabilities on the fly
without investing in new infrastructure, training new personnel, or licensing
new software. Cloud computing encompasses any subscription-based or pay-
per-use service that, in real time over the Internet, extends ICT's existing
capabilities.
2
Cloud computing- The Concept
The term cloud is used as a metaphor for the Internet, based on how
the Internet is depicted in computer network diagrams, and is an abstraction
for the complex infrastructure it conceals.
Comparison:
3
Cloud computing is often confused with grid computing ("a form of
distributed computing whereby a 'super and virtual computer' is composed of
a cluster of networked, loosely-coupled computers, acting in concert to
perform very large tasks"), utility computing (the "packaging of computing
resources, such as computation and storage, as a metered service similar to a
traditional public utility such as electricity") and autonomic computing
("computer systems capable of self-management").
Implementation:
Characteristics:
4
As customers generally do not own the infrastructure, they merely access or
rent, they can avoid capital expenditure and consume resources as a service,
paying instead for what they use. Many cloud-computing offerings have
adopted the utility computing model, which is analogous to how traditional
utilities like electricity are consumed, while others are billed on a
subscription basis. Sharing "perishable and intangible" computing power
among multiple tenants can improve utilization rates, as servers are not left
idle, which can reduce costs significantly while increasing the speed of
application development. A side effect of this approach is that "computer
capacity rises dramatically" as customers do not have to engineer for peak
loads. Adoption has been enabled by "increased high-speed bandwidth"
which makes it possible to receive the same response times from centralized
infrastructure at other sites.
Economics:
5
According to Nicholas Carr the strategic importance of information
technology is diminishing as it becomes standardized and cheaper. He
argues that the cloud computing paradigm shift is similar to the
displacement of electricity generators by electricity grids early in the 20th
century.
Companies:
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6
History
The Cloud is a term with a long history in telephony, which has in the
past decade, been adopted as a metaphor for internet based services, with a
common depiction in network diagrams as a cloud outline.
8
Political Issues
The Cloud spans many borders and "may be the ultimate form of
globalization." As such it becomes subject to complex geopolitical issues:
providers must satisfy myriad regulatory environments in order to deliver
service to a global market. This dates back to the early days of the Internet,
where libertarian thinkers felt that "cyberspace was a distinct place calling
for laws and legal institutions of its own"; author Neal Stephenson envisaged
this as a tiny island data haven called Kinakuta in his classic science-fiction
novel Cryptonomicon.
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9
Legal Issues
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10
Components
Cloud computing Components
Infrastructur
BitTorrent · EC2 · GoGrid · Sun Grid · 3tera
e
Application
Client
Infrastructure
12
Platform (Force.com)
Platform
Service
A cloud service includes "products, services and solutions that are delivered
and consumed in real-time over the Internet". For example, Web Services
("software system[s] designed to support interoperable machine-to-machine
interaction over a network") which may be accessed by other cloud
computing components, software, e.g., Software plus service, or end users
directly. Specific examples include:
13
Mapping (Google Maps, Yahoo! Maps)
Search (Alexa, Google Custom Search, Yahoo! BOSS)
Others (Amazon Mechanical Turk)
Storage
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14
Architecture
15
Types of Cloud Computing
1. Public cloud
2. Private cloud
Private cloud and internal cloud are neologisms that some vendors have
recently used to describe offerings that emulate cloud computing on private
networks. These products claim to "deliver some benefits of cloud
computing without the pitfalls", capitalizing on data security, corporate
governance, and reliability concerns.
16
While an analyst predicted in 2008 that private cloud networks would be the
future of corporate IT, there is some uncertainty whether they are a reality
even within the same firm. Analysts also claim that within five years a "huge
percentage" of small and medium enterprises will get most of their
computing resources from external cloud computing providers as they "will
not have economies of scale to make it worth staying in the IT business" or
be able to afford private clouds.
The term has also been used in the logical rather than physical sense, for
example in reference to platform as service offerings, though such offerings
including Microsoft's Azure Services Platform are not available for on-
premises deployment.
3. Hybrid cloud
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17
Roles of Cloud Computing
Provider
User
Vendor
18
Computer hardware (Dell, HP, IBM, Sun Microsystems)
o Storage (Sun Microsystems, EMC, IBM)
o Infrastructure (Cisco Systems)
Computer software (3tera, Hadoop, IBM, RightScale)
o Operating systems (Solaris, AIX, Linux including Red Hat)
o Platform virtualization (Citrix, Microsoft, VMware, Sun xVM,
IBM)
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19
Conclusion
Cloud Computing is a vast topic and the above report does not give a high
level introduction to it. It is certainly not possible in the limited space of a
report to do justice to these technologies. What is in store for this technology
in the near future? Well, Cloud Computing is leading the industry’s
endeavor to bank on this revolutionary technology.
Simplifies IT management
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21