Head in the Clouds: Businesses Must Deal With Cloud Computing
Cloud computing, a term originating from an old network designers’ icon, is really just the ability to access and use everything you normally work with and need on your PC–without your PC. In other words, it’s the ability to hop on the Internet, or hop in the ‘cloud’, and start working on your spreadsheets, updating your order-forms, and listening to your music without your PC, your flash drive, or your external hard drive. However, even the experts are having a hard time defining cloud computing’s scope, power, and use….
So what are the implications?
Everyone is trying to see this one coming. The New York Times suggests that cloud computing may lend itself to larger censorship. Business Week thinks more and more businesses will rely on it. Newsweek is guessing that the technology will help developing nations. And the Wall Street Journal is witnessing a trend every business is dying to get into.
The thing is…everyone is right. Cloud computing will be huge and it’ll be a boon for emerging economies, new businesses, and consumers. However, cloud computing also comes with its own set of problems: security and censorship key among them.
What does this mean for your office?
Cloud computing is neither swift nor capable enough to reliably support the files and data your business likely uses everyday…. First, cloud computing is in its early stages of development and is prone to hitches, crashes, and delays. You need only too observe Gmail’s touchy service or Google document’s neophtye-like performance to see what I mean.
Regardless of the cloud’s ability to compute, the pressing matter is still security. Businesses may not ever want to risk having their important documents in the cloud at all times–because that means, online or offline, the data can be accessed, stolen, tampered with, or changed (in the same way Amazon deleted Orwell’s 1984 off of users’ Kindles). Cloud computing will prove invaluable to small businesses who would rather save money on hardware rather than worry about the safety of their files.
And for you….
Google’s services, like those of Facebook, Amazon, and Apple, are showing promise for personal use. It won’t be hard to imagine the day when everyone will ditch their fancy computers and laptops for small, cheap, netbooks that can easily access the cloud–and therefore their documents, music, movies, and media.
Although cloud computing will make it easy for people to access their information, it will also leave it in the hands of companies who may or may not exercise some sort of censorship. Meaning, if Apple thinks your document is corrupted with a virus or Amazon thinks you stole that song–it can be deleted without your consent.
Conclusion: Cloud computing won’t be easy to control
The home personal computer will probably fizzle out and, slowly, the office PC might too. Businesses and governments won’t be able to trust all of their data completely to the cloud and they’ll have to content themselves with simply sitting on top of it. However, knowing what to put in the cloud and what not to will prove to be among the decisions future leaders will have to make. Sure, it might be easier and cheaper to work on your customer database on Google Wave with your colleague in Europe–but it won’t be completely safe from outside eyes. What do you do?
Tagged as apple, business sweek, cheap netbooks, cloud computing, cloud computing errors, cloud computing problems, cloud computing's future, gmail, google documents, google wave, kindle, media, netbooks, new york times, orwell's 1984, pc, wall street journal + Categorized as Leadership Videos, Managerial Competence
I have recently written an article that puts a counter-point to your own. It expresses the opinion that Cloud Computing is just a lot of “shiny-object” “techno-tripe” that has little application in the real world of commercial confidence, intellectual property, and business risk.
The article itself can be found at: http://robson.ph/blog/index.php/bensblog/it-experts-with-their-heads-in-the-cloud
I don’t understand how you can follow the censorship comment with the opinion that “The home personal computer will probably fizzle out…” Do you really think that people (especially the ones prone to label everything “socialism”) will so willingly give up control of their personal property? I’m not convinced.
In addition, many people store information on their personal computers which could be embarrassing or detrimental if seen by others. I’m not just talking about the obvious examples of porn or crime, but of smaller, more personal embarrassments: marital infidelity, unpopular political views, bad-mouthing of bosses, etc. Cloud computing can claim it’s secure and that it’s not Big Brother all it wants to. Most people aren’t ready to believe it and they sure won’t want to take a chance on revealing their little secrets.
Veteran IT professionals tell me that cloud computing is actually a step BACKWARD to the days of the ’70s when everything was tied to a mainframe. Personal computers were touted as being a way to take control of your own information and enjoy freedom. If anything, I see current world perceptions and politics driving people to distrust the Googles and the Amazons and the Facebooks—organizations which are perceived as being “too big.” People sure aren’t going to line up to turn over all their information to them.
I think PCs are here to stay.