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Richard Davies wrote: The UK has a good crop of technology pioneers in cloud computing - for example ElasticHosts, FlexiScale, Flexiant, OnApp - and also some strong government initiatives such as G-Cloud. We will have to see whether this kind of technical leadership converts into swift mass-market adoption or not.
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The core theme of Impact was "Smart SOA" and how cloud computing comes together in the enterprise

Earlier this month I attended the IBM Impact conference in Las Vegas.  The core theme of Impact was "Smart SOA" and how cloud computing comes together in the enterprise, with the emphasis on private clouds.  The core notion of private clouds for IBM is really about extending their experience in virtualization, which is vast, into the more modern world of cloud computing.  They hope to sell some hardware and software in the process. 

IBM considers private clouds strategic to its platforms.  The movement to private clouds plays right into its hands.  Recently they are announced a new software appliance called IBM WebSphere CloudBurst Appliance which is "A secure appliance that provides speed and repeatability for deploying WebSphere environments into a private cloud."   Or, we can call it virtualization-in-a-box, to be more accurate.

IBM and many others define private clouds as scalable computing resources that exist in the enterprise data center that have been configured by IT to run a virtual machine upon demand. Business users are empowered to select an application (service, data, and processes) and submit it as a virtualized workload to be run in the private cloud.  The WebSphere Appliance stores and secures virtualized images of applications on a piece of IBM xSeries hardware that's ready to be plugged into a private cloud.

What's significant about this offering, and others in the market, is that they make the move to virtualization and private cloud computing much easier than it has been in the past.  These plug-and-play offerings have the potential to allow data centers to move to virtualization, and thus modernize much more rapidly than in the past.  That's the good news.

The bad news is that, in many instances, these drop-in replacement resources are not driven by some sort of architecture.  Once again we are driving the development of IT infrastructure that's more ad-hoc, and thus runs the risk of not being the right fit for the enterprise's requirements.  This problem has plagued data centers for years, and we run the risk of making things worse by pushing the replacement of existing systems under the battle cry of virtualization. 

The way you win this game is to put some architectural forethought into your existing needs and requirements, including the understanding all existing issues.  Then, and only then, define the "to be" state: How will virtualization be leveraged as an architectural component, and what is the right enabling technology, perhaps virtualization-in-a-box, that will be right for the architecture? 

It doesn't matter how easy the technology is to implement, even technology that comes in a ready-to-run box.  As with any approach to computing, virtualization requires us to understand the issues and opportunities before we simply toss technology at the problem.

About David Linthicum
Dave Linthicum is the CTO of Blue Mountain Labs, and an internationally known cloud computing and SOA expert. He is a sought-after consultant, speaker, and blogger. In his career, Dave has formed or enhanced many of the ideas behind modern distributed computing including EAI, B2B Application Integration, and SOA, approaches and technologies in wide use today. In addition, he is the Editor-in-Chief of SYS-CON's Virtualization Journal. For the last 10 years, he has focused on the technology and strategies around cloud computing, including working with several cloud computing startups. His industry experience includes tenure as CTO and CEO of several successful software and cloud computing companies, and upper-level management positions in Fortune 500 companies. In addition, he was an associate professor of computer science for eight years, and continues to lecture at major technical colleges and universities, including University of Virginia and Arizona State University. He keynotes at many leading technology conferences, and has several well-read columns and blogs. Linthicum has authored 10 books, including the ground-breaking "Enterprise Application Integration" and "B2B Application Integration." You can reach him at david@bluemountainlabs.com. Or follow him on Twitter. Or view his profile on LinkedIn.

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