Come On Techies, Gimme My Cloud Now!
For the biz guys, moving from a server that you had to buy and manage internally to hosting was a great move and a major hassle reduction. The cloud looks like the next logical step. The benefits — no upfront costs, no internal management, no capacity planning — are really compelling for guys who think about the business. But the guys who have to make it work in practice, occasionally say, “Woah, not so fast. You want this to work, right?” In this post, we look at the tension between business logic driving to cloud and the technical hurdles of implementing “apps that matter” in the cloud.
Questions For The Techies
So we decided to put some questions to some smart techies that we know. The role playing here is the CEO needing to make some decisions on where and how to host the service that will shortly get the team fame and fortune.
The first person who rose to this challenge is Tony Bain. Tony Bain is an expat Kiwi, father, entrepreneur, angel investor and blogger who occasionally writes for ReadWriteWeb. He kicked up quite a storm recently with his post “ Is The Relational Database Doomed.”
Apps That Matter
We use “apps that matter” instead of “mission critical” because it sounds less pretentious. These are apps that, when they go down or suffer brownouts bring on a storm of outrage in the blogosphere. Well, at least they do when you have traction, and you are planning to have traction, right?
Apps that matter usually involve write as well as read. They may also involve, at some stage, transactions that include money getting transferred.









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With respect to refreshing hardware or replacing hardware--why not sell the hardware
It's great to that you are thriving during this recession - congratulations! I don't
You don't ever want to stop marketing. That's the engine that keeps your pipeline ful
If you want all your files backed up remotely without having to remember to run backu
John, your point about seeing presentations on 10-inch monitors is key. I'd also