Unleash Your Potential - Namagunga Girls Coding Club
Cloud Computing 101
1. An Overview of Applications that are Currently Delivered via the Cloud and Potential Applications for the Future Ben Kepes Diversity Limited NZ Cloud Computing Summit October 2009 Photo credit - svanes
2. Agenda Who am I? Understanding Cloud Computing Understanding SaaS Understanding PaaS Understanding IaaS Cloudy Effects Looking to the future
4. Understanding Cloud Computing Is it… Software as a Service? Cloud Storage? Platform as a Service? Virtualisation? Infrastructure as a Service? Multi Tenancy? Web 2.0? Outsourcing?
10. Understanding Cloud Computing Cloud can be a utility model – a software model of electricity, water or telco delivery Users need not have expertise over technology infrastructure It can be a way to gain infrastructural efficiencies An easy development platform
12. “ …everyone on the planet deserves to have their own virtual data center in the cloud ” - Lew Tucker, CTO of SUN cloud group
13. “ …we are able to reduce our IT operational costs by roughly 30% of what we’re spending now ” - Ingo Elfering, Vice President of Information Technology Strategy, GlaxoSmithKline
14. “ The deployment time is really what impressed us, it's just shy of instantaneous ” - Dave Powers Associate Information Consultant, Eli Lilly
15. Understanding SaaS Modern version of application service providers (ASPs) but, Custom created for web based delivery Single instance, multi-tenant architecture Provider patch and upgrade management May include application programming interfaces (APIs) Generally subscription basis – per seat, user, instance
16. Cloud Deployment Case Study #1 A cloud based billing system powers online delivery of micro format news
17. Saving Traditional Media Reed Business Information - 400 publications - 200 online properties Needed comprehensive billing functionality Needed simple integration with SFDC, Oracle, Website Needed simple implementation Needed affordability and minimal CAPEX
18. Saving Traditional Media Media content located within traditional media dataspace utilise advanced tagging to categorise content subscribe via a SaaSbilling platform Receive the content you want, how you want it
19. Understanding PaaS Services to develop, test, deploy, host Web based user interface Multi-tenant architecture Integration with web services and databases Support for development team collaboration Utility-grade instrumentation
20. Cloud Deployment Case Study #2 Quoting system created on PaaS, integrated with SaaS CRM and SaaS Accounting
21. Driving Efficiencies CyberSafesecurity solution provider Utilisedon-premises contact manager/accounting Needed quoting system Wanted integration with contact manager Wished to retire disconnected legacy system
22. Driving Efficiencies Implemented salesforce.com SaaS CRM in 2002 utilised force.com PaaS to develop custom-built quoting system integrated automatically via PaaS with salesforce.com Deployed Coda2go SaaS accounting application leveraging totally connected cloud based SaaS/PaaS
23. “Services designed to scale to tens or hundreds or millions of users will dramatically change the nature and cost of solutions deliverable to enterprise..” - Bill Gates Microsoft Internal memo
24. “I believe, over time, more and more software will be delivered as a service. I totally believe that... We have to be good at this, or we have a problem” - Larry Ellison CEO Oracle
25. Understanding IaaS Resources delivered as a service Dynamic scaling of infrastructure Variable cost service Multiple tenants on the same infrastructure resources Enterprise grade infrastructure
26. So... About Cloud being just for SMBs Manages risks of acquisition of software Minimises roll-out requirements Keeps IT strategically focussed Eases pain of managing on-premise apps
27. Cloud Deployment Case Study #3 Utilising data and graphical processing services from the cloud for an inside-the-firewall analysis…
28. Enterprise Data Visibility human readable 3rd party website that is too technical and complex for exec level readership utilise 3rd party API to get only the data needed for exec summary summarize this in enterprise dashboard for exec level readership utilize charting to represent trends over time
30. How will the cloud affect the organisation? IT governance implications Security needs Service level agreements (SLAs) Migration strategies In-house integration Regulatory impacts IT Role impacts
33. IT Free Zone Company experienced rapid growth (400% employee count growth in one month) Philosophy: “IT Free Zone” Only IT around the office: Laptops, WiFi, Printer
34. IT Free Zone IaaS – GoGrid, Media Temple, Amazon EC2 PaaS - Force.com SaaS – Salesforce, Xero, Google Apps
35. Advantages? Quick office set up, just a few hours Radically reduced cost of IT, setup and ongoing Minimal Capex Staff access/collaboration Remote work, from office to home
36. And to the Future? No more in-house infrastructure Ubiquitous access from situational devices Ability to rapidly develop, test and deploy even extreme edge solutions Upswing in business unit innovation Better, Stronger, Faster
37. Next steps….. Try it out – Cloud isn’t completely terrifying Spin up a server on Amazon Store something on S3 or an end-user service Try out a consumer SaaS application ben@diversity.net.nz
Notes de l'éditeur
Agenda for today
A very quick introduction to what cloud computing actually is…
A very quick introduction to what cloud computing actually is…
Some common themes of cloud computing
Another visual explanation
Cloud computing paradigm of computing in which dynamically scalable and often virtualized resources are provided as a service over the InternetUsers need not have knowledge of, expertise in, or control over the technology infrastructure in the "cloud" that supports themThe concept generally incorporates combinations of the following:infrastructure as a service (IaaS)platform as a service (PaaS)software as a service (SaaS)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.
Salesforce.com is held up as the classic example of SaaS – sign up and you have a full featured CRM available to you immediately. Configuration and customisation can all be done via your web browser. “Great – it fits in the SaaS box” you say…but not quite…Force.com is the platform under-pinning Salesforce.com – and on Force.com you can build any type of application you like – CRM related or not. Often implementers will customise salesforce using the force.com platform thereby creating, in effect a hybrid SaaS/PaaS offeringGoogle AppEngine and Windows Azure are essentially straight PaaS solutions – take your application component and deploy into the platform. Azure pushes into the IaaS aspects of cloud computing – for example, by offering relatively low level SQL Server features in a way not dissimilar to what you essentially get when starting an “off the shelf” Windows SQL Server AMI on Amazon EC2.Amazon EC2 is predominantly IaaS; and apart from some specific limitations, mainly around networking, is not too dissimilar from that of mass-market virtualisation providers or what large enterprise IT teams offer their internal customers in “private clouds”.
With AWS a new server can be up and running in three minutes (it used to take Eli Lilly seven and a half weeks to deploy a server internally) and a 64-node Linux cluster can be online in five minutes (compared with three months internally).
develop, test, deploy, host and maintain applicationssource code control, version control, dynamic (interactive) multiple user testing, roll out and roll back with the ability to audit and track who made what changes when to accomplish what purposeWeb based user interface creation toolsWYSIWYG etc etcMulti-tenant architectureIntegration with web services and databasesSupport for SOAP and REST interfaces allow PaaS offerings to create compositions of multiple Web services, sometimes called "Mashups".Support for development team collaborationThe ability to form and share code with ad-hoc or pre-defined or distributed teams greatly enhances the productivity of PaaS offerings. Schedules, objectives, teams, action items, owners of different areas of responsibilities, roles (designers, developers, tester, QC) can be defined, updated and tracked based on access rights.Utility-grade instrumentation
Resources delivered as a service including servers, network equipment, memory, CPU, disk space, data center facilities,Dynamic scaling of infrastructure which scales up and down based on application resource needs AMAZON 50k per dayVariable cost service using fixed prices per resource componentMultiple tenants typically coexist on the same infrastructure resourcesEnterprise grade infrastructure allows mid-size companies to benefit from the aggregate compute resource pools
No huge capital investment required so less risky financiallyMinimises time to value period – 30 day free trial shows quick benefitsEncourages consistent utilisation and therefore reduces roll out headachesSaaS reduces IT depts requirements to spend time sysadmining – therefore can do higher value strategic IT stuff
- The data from the 3rd party is normally available via a web application which is human accessible only.- In order for anyone to see the data, they need to log in and then drill down to the level they require.- The layout of the web application is somewhat convoluted and not suitable for executive level.- The data is made suitable for display in executive summary by automating the data access via the 3rd party API
Need to assess how change will effect existing IT assetsAssess data security needs and ensure external SaaS provider can meet organisation’s requirementsGiven that SaaS has traditionally been seen as a SME delivery methodology – SaaS providers may not have service level agreements already in place – need to ensure SLAs are in place, guarantees are sufficient to meet organisational needs and mitigation provisions are sufficient to cope with a “worst case” situationEnsure prospective SaaS provider has data-migration functionalities in the event that later migration from the SaaS product is required. Ensure access to raw data and contractual agreed access to organisational dataObvious need to ensure that SaaS product will integrate with other organisationally used applicationsIn these post enron days and with sarbanes-oxley requirements SAS70 (Statement on auditing standards #70) is a major issue. Need to ensure SaaS provider can provide a SAS70 report and that it meets organisational requirements in terms of privacy and data securityIT departments embracing an open outsourcing or SaaS perspective need to see themselves not as IT gatekeepers but internal consultants offering advice, deployment services and mission critical IT functionality. It moves IT from a technology-centric approach to a service-centric one where it can add value to the organisation within which it operates