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March 22, 2011 09:09 AM

Is the Cloud Really Just the Return of Mainframe Computing?

SQL Server Pro
InstantDoc ID #129854

These days it seems like just about every vendor is pushing its numerous and varied cloud offerings. It also seems like businesses are holding off on moving to cloud computing with just as much vigor. Everyone has heard all the different cloud sales pitches: Cloud services offer unlimited scalability, they provide global access to computing services, they eliminate the need to buy private infrastructure, they transform IT costs from CapEx to OpEx, they reduce management, they allow IT to be greener, and the list goes on. The funny thing is that despite all the hype, IT just isn’t buying it—at least not yet. And this reluctance to jump headfirst into the cloud is reflected by many of the cloud sales specials that you see popping up. Many vendors, such as Amazon, are offering free low-level services to try to get you started with their offerings. Other vendors, such as Microsoft, are offering free trial periods to entice you to try their services.

One of the reasons businesses aren’t all gaga about cloud services is that these services harken back to an era of computing that fell out of favor a decade or two ago—the era of the mainframe. If you think about it, cloud computing is a lot like the old centralized IT processing model of the past embodied by the mainframe. Computing power is moved away from the end users and into a centralized entity that’s managed by someone else. To be fair, the cloud isn’t really centralized the way mainframes of the past were (and are). However, the cloud and mainframes are alike in that they both move the computing power and infrastructure governance farther from the users of those platforms. Given the nature of cloud computing, the mainframe appears to be something like the ultimate cloud platform. Extreme scalability, availability, virtualization, and usage-based metering have been part of the mainframe for decades. And this mainframe mentality is part of the problem many organizations have with the cloud. Businesses moved away from that model of centralized computing on purpose. Businesses, and perhaps more specifically their departments and end users, wanted more control of their computing resources. They didn’t want to share them with other business units—let alone other businesses. This is exactly what the cloud requires that you do. These factors led to the rise of distributed PC computing, client/server computing, and the web that we use today. Somewhat ironically, Microsoft was one of the leading vendors driving the push behind the distributed PC computing model and away from the centralized computing model, but today Microsoft is one of the leaders in the push to the cloud.

I know that cloud vendors would adamantly disagree with this assessment, but in some ways moving to the cloud is a bit like a step back in time. Cloud computing definitely moves much of the control of the computing resources away from the end users they service. The cloud also moves control of those resources out of the hands of IT. This isn’t the first time an attempt has been made to resurrect this centralized computing model. About a decade ago vendors tried to sell IT on the then-hot trend of thin-client computing. IT didn’t buy into that one, either—although perhaps in the long run it did herald the transition away from desktop applications to browser-based applications.

Perhaps computing trends are just like fashion, and just like those old bell bottoms from the 1960s have come back, so will the centralized computing model—as the cloud but with a modern twist. Certainly the landscape today is vastly different than it was in the era of the mainframe, or even a decade ago when thin-client computing was the media darling. Network connections are better today and the Internet, though far from perfect, is more reliable. But the $64,000 question around the future of cloud computing is, What do businesses really want? Do they really want to move back to a more centralized computing model in which the processing power and the control of IT resources lie outside the walls of the business, or do they prefer the more distributed, albeit more complex, model of distributed computing that we have today?



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Comments
  • stocklandit
    1 year ago
    May 12, 2011

    Sucessful database cloud computing requires separation of a business data model from data repository. To be more clear, business logic belongs to business and current database structure/model does not give us an option to separate of data repository and business logic (represented through data model). A data model is the key between the data peaces and usefull information.
    If a cloud vendor can provide "universal data model" in the cloud, I will be able to adapt my business data model in such a wey to be able to perform business transactions using pointers to data that exists within the cloud. In this case a DBA will have confidence to accept cloud as a data container for big enterprise databases.
    Cloud vendors do not offer enough in regards to database in cloud. I'll rather create my local cloud in current case.

  • mfritz2020
    1 year ago
    May 12, 2011

    Yeah there will be lots of functionality that distinguish the cloud from the mainframe model. But that doesn't negate the main reason the major ISV's are dying for the world to adopt the cloud. They want businesses and individuals to pay monthly subscriptions forever. In the 90's they called it the ASP model (application service provider) only the bandwidth wasn't ready then. Now it is. There is no perfect model this one will have its warts too. Stay tuned

  • Baldur
    1 year ago
    May 12, 2011

    Simple personal reasons why to love the cloud
    * hardware fails. Having gone through 3 laptops and migrated before to Google was a total change. From my "puppy died" emotion when my first harddisc failed to who cares, I have my data in the cloud.
    * realtime sync of data to the cloud and important stuff back to several PC-s- when another laptop harddisk failed, first time ever everything was backed up, so just new gadget and sync from the cloud
    * VMware making conf-s just another file/folder that can be synced and run everywhere where I want.

    So, it's not just some strange app where the user is powerless. (run in your single provider or don't run)
    For individual user it's a myriad of alternatives to choose what you want to keep where and what machine to run where.

  • gudmk
    1 year ago
    May 12, 2011

    Good article. It's very strange to want to use ever more powerful PCs as dumb workstations.

    The cloud should extend to all computing devices. This is explained in this e-booklet:

    http://www.amazon.com/The-Ether-ebook/dp/B004HO68WY/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&m=AG56TWVU5XWC2&s=digital-text&qid=1305231822&sr=1-1

  • billiken66
    1 year ago
    Apr 14, 2011

    "Small correction: bell bottoms were a '70s thing"

    Well, they started in the late '60s. I got my bachelor's degree in '70, and they were already "the thing" well before I started that senior year (in 1969).

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