I have to agree with Bill. Given the proper use case, cloud (true cloud, which is not just "someone else's computer", a common misconception) can be an advantage. Moving some of our compute and storage resources to the cloud allows us more agility to react to changes and liberates our limited IT resources to engage in higher value strategic work. On Wed, Apr 19, 2017 at 11:49 AM william degnan via vcf-midatlantic < vcf-midatlantic@lists.vintagecomputerfederation.org> wrote:
Yes. With people jumping in droves to put everything in/on "THE CLOUD!!", without a thought or a clue as to the consequences, I can't
help
but sit back and laugh. It's the same centralized model, except that it's, as Matt Patoray so aptly puts it, SOMEONE ELSE'S COMPUTER.
At least the company mainframe was owned by an entity whom you ostensibly had some sort of a connection to.
Oh well. People will learn when all their stuff just up and disappears. And companies will figure out what happens when they store their customer lists and other business-proprietary data on computers owned by some of the world's largest data mining companies. B-)
-Dave
Dave - If you know what you're doing using cloud computing gives a person/company the competitive advantage vs. physical, dollar for dollar. Money is a big thing especially if you're willing to spend the same money you were before towards things like load balancing etc. For my business I have a cloud network with a robust backup and recovery process, multiple server OS's. It has proven to be faster, cheaper to support and more reliable than physical servers over time. With cloud things can go wrong, I agree. In particular if you did dumb things with physical servers and simply moved your process into the cloud.
BTW I am not talking about simple drop box type storage, I am taking server/dbase/private subnet/process/object backups etc
Physical has its place and there are cases where it's better than cloud, and if your networking is not set up correctly cloud is not going to fix a poor design.
My underlying point - The refs throws the yellow card on any blanket statements saying CLOUD is not good just because it's someone else's computer.
Bill