How cloud computing will change everything

woofy

The Master of Disaster
Staff member
Administrator
There's been a lot of talk about "the cloud" when it comes to technology and IT in the past few years. It's a revolution as big as the advent of the microprocessor and just as relevant as the desktop computer. The cloud is quickly changing businesses as we know them, forcing them to reboot how they think about their consumers in this everconnected world.

We're not just talking about everything from owning data centres to your accounting software to your email server, but the products and services that are being sold. If the cloud isn't on your business's mind, rest assured that it should be, and that it will (once again) change everything.


In simplistic terms, the cloud is just another term for the Internet as a storage facility. The core technological innovation is that, instead of storing a single piece of software and/or data on your own, single, fixed computer, you can now store data and run software off of the Internet - giving it freedom to be accessed by any computer of your choice and creating the ultimate backup plan.


What does this look like? Currently, the majority of my business software and data is cloud-based. So, if someone should steal my laptop or if it should break down, all I have to do is grab another one and log on to the Internet. My information, pictures, music, videos and everything else also are backed up on the cloud (thanks to a great application called Dropbox).

It also enables everything I create and need to be available asynchronously. When I write a document on my MacBook Air, it is automatically saved through Dropbox and I can access it from any other computer and yes, even my iPhone--in real time. Companies like Salesforce.com have helped to innovate the cloud as a business model by offering software as a service (also known as SaaS) for years.


Instead of buying software and installing it on every computer, you purchase licences that can be used to access the software through the Internet. Not only is all of the data and customization also stored securely online, but when the company updates the software or fixes bugs, the platform is simply updated and the long hard work of having to update each and every workstation goes the way of the dodo bird.


While some of this may seem very technical and not relevant to your day-to-day work of trying to grow your business, these new ways to access and interact are creating fundamental shifts in business. As the music industry continues to unravel and as the next generation of music business models evolve, the cloud is starting to weigh heavily on how we connect to music. ITunes enables us to buy music and store it on our hard drives, iPhones and iPods.

The ability to create playlists and organize our music has fundamentally changed how we buy and listen to music. Recently, services like rdio and Spotify (not yet available in Canada, but rumoured to be coming soon) offer unlimited music, everywhere. For a small monthly fee, you get access to a massive collection of music that can be streamed from the cloud to almost any device that has Internet connectivity.

So, instead of choosing songs on iTunes, buying them, downloading and storing them, you can simply stream everything from this massive collection. Think of it as a TV cable service for music.


Why own? I've been given an evaluation licence to Spotify and it made me realize that the struggle between my CD collection becoming digital and now the lack of desire to actually own any sort of data creates a compelling case for the power of the cloud. Would I rather own a bunch of songs or have unlimited access to as much music as possible?

Yes, both rdio and Spotify also allow users to buy and download music, but there just doesn't seem to be a point to physically owning the files (unless there are times when you're not connected to the Internet and want to listen to music--like on a plane or in an area that lacks connectivity).

As mobile data and Internet connectivity converge with faster speeds and more competitive pricing, everything is quickly moving to the cloud - from your business data to your home entertainment to new and interesting products and services to buy. This creates new businesses, new job opportunities and much more innovation.

With that innovation also comes massive disruption. Yes . more disruption. This is a time of great upheaval in business. With that upheaval comes considerable opportunity for the companies and individuals brave enough to see this as an once-in-a-lifetime chance to do something truly new and amazing in business
 
The problems I foresee with the cloud is that many people will not back up their files onto something physical like a hard drive, dvd, cds or whatever. Will these cloud hosting companies guarantee the safety of the files from hackers, power outages, server meltdowns? etc...
 
I back up my most important stuff and I #1, take precautions. If I'm going looking for info in uncharted waters, I go in Linux.

I am old fashioned I guess. I like a good hard solid copy! I have a USB car stereo so I don't need discs there.

I see the problem with the cloud as privacy which we have very little of now. Time will tell, but people are realizing that everyone knows everything and the cloud scares some of them.

I read a good article about it a while back. Can they support the cloud. Will it be profitable enough to keep the cloud from becoming a bubble?
 
"Time will tell, but people are realizing that everyone knows everything and the cloud scares some of them"

Put me in that group, Yankee. It's bad enough that people can find out what they want with some serious work, but the last thin I need is to store any file, in an internet cloud and make it all the easier to access. Take a look at proposed legislation, in the Canadian House of Commons that would no longer require a search warrant for police to access your info. A simple request to an ISP and the info would be turned over. Entrusting anything to cloud technology sounds, to me, to be somewhat foolhardy. JMO
 
Take a look at proposed legislation, in the Canadian House of Commons that would no longer require a search warrant for police to access your info. A simple request to an ISP and the info would be turned over. Entrusting anything to cloud technology sounds, to me, to be somewhat foolhardy.[/QUOTE]
It' not just foolhardy but with the new legislation Canada is becoming a more fascist state everyday. They are even going so far as to state that if you don't agree with the new legislation then you are pro- child pornography, and the worst part is that most Canadians will be dumb enough to agree and worst yet vote for this gov't again.
 
Well, musicmanitou, I just fired off an email to Vic Toews, earlier, this morning, voicing my disgust at his statement where he says that if you are against the legislation, you are pro child pornography. I said that by making that statement he could be considered my many, to be slandering them. I also told him that I did not trust police forces, in this country, to have unfettered access to individuals communications without a warrant. Damn it, much of the time corruption revolves around either politicians or police forces. Maybe we should all have access to MP's email and cell phones. Let's just see how much work is actually being done.
 
I back up my most important stuff and I #1, take precautions. If I'm going looking for info in uncharted waters, I go in Linux.

I am old fashioned I guess. I like a good hard solid copy! I have a USB car stereo so I don't need discs there.

I see the problem with the cloud as privacy which we have very little of now. Time will tell, but people are realizing that everyone knows everything and the cloud scares some of them.

I read a good article about it a while back. Can they support the cloud. Will it be profitable enough to keep the cloud from becoming a bubble?

That's the heart of the issue, all one can ask for is an opt out clause.
 
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