NEWS
Ray Ozzie, Microsoft's chief software architect, is a big believer in the cloud. But he knows large businesses don't yet share his confidence.
"Enterprises will not really trust the cloud until they get some experience with it," Ozzie said, during a speech at a JP Morgan investment conference in Boston on Wednesday. He said that large businesses are more likely to start by going with an online version of a familiar product like Microsoft Exchange than they are to move a major piece of their business into the cloud.
In October, Microsoft announced Windows Azure, a set of tools that is somewhat akin to a web-based operating system that developers can use to build software that can then run in Microsoft's datacentres.
"In the next year or two I believe that the biggest impact of cloud computing is going to be in things like Exchange and SharePoint for us or those comparable offerings from our competitors," Ozzie said. Using one of those services allows a company to know how much bandwidth they need to communicate with the cloud, understand how cloud services can be managed, as well as just build up a certain comfort level.
"It will work its way into other parts of the enterprise IT environment over time as they get their comfort level," he said.
One of the lighter moments came when Ozzie was asked what were the lessons Microsoft learned from Windows Vista.
"How much time do you have?" Ozzie quipped.
Ozzie then went on to discuss some of the problems with Vista, including the false starts that he said resulted from "over commitment".
"We had a vision that was larger than what we could achieve within the period of time that we needed to bring [the product] to market," Ozzie said.
And by changing its timing and feature set, Ozzie noted that Microsoft's partners were both too early and too late when it came to deciding when to spend time on Vista.
"If we don't give very clear predictable signals to those partners...about dates," Ozzie said, "they don't know when to invest and when not to invest."
The result, he said, was that drivers weren't ready, leaving PC makers in a tough position and ultimately creating a less-than-satisfactory experience for consumers and businesses. Many of those issues, he said, were taken to heart when it came to planning and communicating around Windows 7, he said.
Some of Ozzie's more intriguing comments came when he talked about the need for partnership over time as Microsoft builds out its cloud. So far, Microsoft has built its own datacentres, but they have largely been in the US. Due to varying regulations in different countries, though, Ozzie talked about the need for datacentres "everywhere on earth".
"Every country will have datacentres," he said, but added that Microsoft itself doesn't have the resources to build a cloud in each country. "We have to have partners."







Comments
There are 2 comments. Join the discussion
1. karen challinor
when the cloud offers
1 - a viable security model that protects us from the prying eyes of the cloud company, our competitors and the legislation and laws of foreign governments
and
2 - guaranteed access to our own data and applications at a level comparable to having it in our own local datacentre
then we'll investigate the issue of trust
not every company wishes to be able to access data and services from Timbuktu when the company itself is based in East Cheam
the number of staff in any given company that actually need such a service is vanishingly small
so the major benefit we are being sold is a headcount and equipment reduction and to take advantage of this we merely place our companies future and finances firmly in the hands of someone else
2. Toffer Winslow
Ray Ozzie is right to suggest that enterprises won’t fully trust the cloud unless they get some experience with it first.
But the issue runs deeper than that. Just because you’ve got experience of using something it doesn’t necessarily mean you’ll come to trust it.
Transparency is the bedrock of trust and this is certainly the case when it comes to enterprises using the cloud as a platform for running their business critical apps.
If enterprises are to trust the cloud they will need to have a closer look into how the business transactions are executed and how they perform in it.
But like any relationship, trust is only built when you fully understand how something (or someone) works