| By Don Dodge | Article Rating: |
|
| July 31, 2008 04:00 PM EDT | Reads: |
11,938 |
Don Dodge's Blog
The web fanatics and blogosphere would have you believe that all applications will move to the web. Some will, most will not. Reliability, scalability, security, and a host of other issues will prevent most businesses from moving their mission critical applications to hosted services or cloud based services. The risk of failure is too great.
I woke up earlier this June and checked TechMeme to see what was happening in the tech world. Three stories jumped out at me. Amazon was down due to a Denial of Service attack. Twitter has been down many times over the past few weeks. Dave Winer says he needs a Plan B for Twitter. Disqus, the blog commenting service, has also been down several times recently.
So, I decided to write a quick post about the unreliability of cloud based services. Normally I use Windows Live Writer, a desktop based program, to compose my posts. But, since this was going to be a quick post with no graphics or photos I decided to use TypePad's web based service. Big mistake. It crashed when I tried to run the spell check service just before posting. I swear, I am not making this up.
Typepad provides a browser window to compose your post. Then when you want to use spell check it calls out to another service and runs your text through it. At precisely this point the service failed. Actually it said it was running the spell checker...forever. I decided to let it run for a while to see if it would recover. Nope. I tried to refresh the screen. It said if I navigate away from this screen all work would be lost. It had already been 20 minutes and nothing else seemed to work so I tried the screen refresh. Gone...everything gone. I tried the back button. No luck.
TypePad has lost my posts under similar circumstances probably 10 times out of 300 posts. So failing 3% of the time isn't bad, right? No way. That is why I stopped using TypePad for posting a long time ago. I thought I would be OK with a quick simple post. But, no, screwed again. That is it for me. Never again.
The web fanatics and blogosphere would have you believe that all applications will move to the web. Some will, most will not. Reliability, scalability, security, and a host of other issues will prevent most businesses from moving their mission critical applications to hosted services or cloud based services. The risk of failure is too great.
Amazon is the leader in cloud based services, but even Amazon has experienced down times for its own business. Cloud services will continue to improve. But my guess is the uptake will take longer than most people predict. Today was another reminder of the reality and risk.
[This appeared originally here and is republished by kind permission of the author, who retains full copyright.]
Published July 31, 2008 Reads 11,938
Copyright © 2008 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
- What is Cloud Computing?
- The Three Levels of Cloud Computing
- Cloud Computing: The Business of Building Clouds
- Cloud Computing: It's the Future of Enterprise IT
- Understanding "Clouded" Terms of Cloud Computing
- Cloud Computing: I Want To Have My Cake and Eat It Too
- Virtualization & Cloud Computing: Perfect Together
- Citrix CEO "The Industry Needs Time"
- Merrill Lynch Estimates "Cloud Computing" To Be $100 Billion Market
- Cloud Computing and Reliability
- Cloud Computing: Automation's Great - But I Trust Humans More
- Is Google the Elephant in the Cloud?
More Stories By Don Dodge
Don Dodge has been a product, strategic and market visionary at five start-up ventures and possesses a track record of driving business and technology in entrepreneurial and high-growth environments. Most recently he was Director, Business Development at Microsoft, where he handled Venture Capital relations and business development with start-up companies in the Boston area.
![]() |
Don Dodge 07/19/08 03:55:42 PM EDT | |||
D Cheng, Of course in-house systems go down. What I am saying is that our psychological need for control makes us hold onto teh traditional ways of doing things. When systems go down we want to know why, and what we can do to prevent it from happening again. When are systems are hosted in the cloud we don't really know what happened or why. |
||||
![]() |
D Cheng 07/15/08 05:42:18 PM EDT | |||
Ok... So are you saying in-house systems never go down? |
||||
![]() |
David Meyer 06/27/08 01:14:56 PM EDT | |||
My wife's podcasting service offers a choice of composing your content locally or in the cloud. I've always advocated "locally" as that way you have a local "backup" in case something breaks on their end. AND you get a few more options to customize your work. |
||||
- Open Source Java Guru Moving to Joost
- Apple Introduces New iPod nano With Built-in Video Camera
- MTV Video Music Award-Winning Green Day To Host Special Music Countdown on SIRIUS XM Radio
- Ipadio’s iPhone App Makes Mobile Broadcasting and Audio Blogging a Breeze
- GITEX TECHNOLOGY WEEK 2009 Exhibitor Profiles
- Mobile Application Stores: What's the Operator's Play
- Technology Face-Off: Augmented Reality vs Mobile Image
- Stewart McKie Launches Mobile Tagging and Content Delivery Topic on Ulitzer
- Apple Approves First Official Porn Star App for iPhone
- Whatever Was Meg Thinking
- Will Ulitzer Dominate News Content on The Web? -Gartner
- Software AG Named "Gold Sponsor" of SOA World Conference & Expo 2009 East
- Adobe Flash Media Server on iPhone
- Open Source Java Guru Moving to Joost
- Did Bill O'Reilly and Fox News Contribute to Dr. Tiller's Murder?
- I Have Three Free Guest Passes for the iPhone Developer Summit
- Will Corporate America Embrace the iPhone?
- Gorilla Logic Announces FlexMonkey for Adobe Flex
- iPhone Developer Summit Day Two: Show Report
- Where Web 2.0 Meets Voice 2.0
- Video Conference with Flex & FMS
- SYS-CON Events Announces iTVcon Internet TV Conference & Expo 2007
- AJAX and Enterprise RIA Tools - JSF, Flex, and JavaFX
- iTVCon - Internet Video Conference & Expo Registrations Now Open
- Internet Video Update: First "Webisode" of Quarterlife Will Air on MySpaceTV
- Microsoft's Flash-Killer Silverlight Streaming Video Plug-in Released
- "TV Anywhere, Anytime" Gets a Boost...From Joost
- Android: Who Hates Google Over the Phone?
- From Enterprise to Cloud, Virtualization Today on SYS-CON.TV
- iTVCon - Starts Next Monday! Check Out the Full Speaker Lineup




































