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Amazon CTO talks cloud computing

CeBit 2009 Blue skies ahead
Sat Mar 07 2009, 17:23

AMAZON MAY BE a bookseller but its heart is in the cloud, according to Dr. Werner Vogels, vice-president and CTO at Amazon.com.

In a keynote speech here at CeBit, the Dutchman said the firm's cloud computing service, EC3 "is a serious business for Amazon" and that the firm was committed to pushing forward with "the hard disk in the sky".

Vogels said Amazon's pay as you go, (or pay-as-you-grow) service helped companies slash their capital expenditure by removing infrastructure cost for expensive, manpower sucking server purchase and setup. The bookseller's leasing service also does away with much of the uncertainty small startups may have when trying to decide whether or not to cough up for hundreds or thousands of servers they may not eventually need, said Vogels.

"You only pay for what you use" explained Vogels, adding that the flexibility aspect of the service was its key asset. "If you bought the infrastrcuture, you're stuck with it", he said.

Dr--werner-vogels--vice-president-and-cto-at-amazon-comSo how exactly do you go from flogging second hand paperbacks to server space in the cloud? "We needed to develop it for ourselves", said Vogel, adding it took 200-300 different services to pull together one Amazon page, meaning the company needed a virtual machine which could scale up and down in a matter of minutes. According to Vogels, Amazon was estimating its technical staff spent 70 per cent of their time doing "undifferentiated heavy lifting" to set up servers and other necessary hardware, and decided that since it now had expertise in doing it, it may as well punt the services out for cash.

The move, which many originally saw as a gamble for the firm, seems to be paying off, but Amazon doesn't seem to be letting its cloud success fog its head. "It is very important for cloud services that there is no lock in" noted Vogel, saying Amazon allowed its customers to use its tools alongside those from competition services like IBM, Microsoft, oracle, Salesforce, Sun and RedHat.

It certainly seems the Amazon CTO has lofty ideals for his firm, with the cloudy sky as the limit. µ

 

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Comments
Your point is silly.

Your point is silly. Be it amazons "cloud", or your own personal storage on your personal network, ALL mediums are subject to the same or similar privacy and security concerns. The important difference, however, is that cloud-based services bet the farm on insuring things like this never (or as rare as possible) occur, as that is a quick way to lose business.

Do I want to trust JOE with my assets, or a professional cloud-based storage solution which services 1000x more content than JOE? Hmmmmmmmmmmm.

Your line of thinking is why many companies go bankrupt, because they do not have ample vision to adapt to future business models. But hey, don't take my word on it.

posted by : AaronS, 10 March 2009 Complain about this comment
The higher the cloud is the harder it falls

All that is needed is one juicy nasty privacy or industrial espionage scandal to bring all this cloud crap to its knees. With all the private, sensitive, confidential and trade secrety stuff being masively stored on someone elses servers its just a matter of time.

Tick, tock, tick, tock, ....

posted by : mythbusters, 08 March 2009 Complain about this comment
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