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Ghost: VDI for the Masses

December 2, 2008 3 Comments

Yesterday, while listening to Marketplace on NPR, I head a story about an interesting joint Israel-Palestinian tech start-up called g.ho.st.  I found this interesting for two reasons: first, that the company consists of both Israeli and Palestinian employees.  The fact that you have both people working together to create something is a great sign and something that their governments could learn from as a means of creating a more lasting peace in the region.

Second, that the service they are creating, a “global hosted operating system” is essentially the concept of Virtual Desktop Infrastructure for the masses.  While VDI has classically been used by enterprises for their internal desktops, the idea behind g.ho.st is to extend the reliability of VDI to the consumer.  Imagine moving not just your data but your entire desktop into the cloud.  And then being able to acess that desktop from any web browser (or cell phone?)…that’s the idea behind g.ho.st.

While it’s not a solution for everyone (I doubt a power user like myself will be moving their desktop up to the cloud anytime soon), the general idea does have value to many computers users today.  This is something that will take some time for users to adopt, even longer than cloud based apps in my mind, but is what I believe to be the wave of the future.

I’ll try to take a closer look at g.ho.st in the coming weeks and post more more thorough review based upon what they have in their current alpha state.

Just not sure how the privacy laws would apply to this.  The law is always the lagard in technology innovation like this…

Filed Under: Tech Industry, Virtualization Tagged With: Cloud Computing, Cloud Desktop, g.ho.st

Some Cloudy Thoughts

September 15, 2008 Leave a Comment

I have had a few interesting cloud related articles that I have been meaning to share.  Slowly, the melding of the cloud and enterprise virtualization are starting to become more apparent.

  • Peter Laird’s (already dated) Visual Map of the Cloud Computing/SaaS/PaaS Market: September 2008 Update.  I appreciate the way Laird separates Cloud, SaaS and Paas which are each very different.  I’d expect an update to this shortly that features VMware…
  • The 10 Laws of Cloudonomics is an interesting set of “Laws” for the cloud
  • Some food for legal thought on how Cloud computing may draw government action

I would expect to see more articles that start to talk about the joining of the cloud and the enterprise datacenter over the next few weeks…the cloud is not just for the web2.0 or startup anymore.

Filed Under: Tech Industry Tagged With: Cloud Computing, PaaS, SaaS

Discussions with Healthcare Industry CTOs

June 12, 2008 Leave a Comment

Yesterday I spent half a day discussing virtualization strategies with a few CTOs from a $15B firm from the healthcare industry.  It was refreshing to see the same glint in the eyes of these CTOs regarding virtualization’s potential to revolutionize their data centers as I saw before joining VMware.  The key aspects of these discussions was how virtualization can help them reduce not only their capex but also their opex.  They also saw the potential that virtualization provides in the areas of increasing their service delivery times (provisioning new systems for customers in 2 hours instead of 2 weeks or 2 months like they are used to) as well as enabeling a new way of thinking about disaster recovery.

Like most IT executives, these CTOs knew about virtualization from the aspect of the hyperadvisor; the core of virtualization that allows you to run multiple operating systems on the same computer at the same time (with each operating system thinking it’s by itself).  This is just the start of the software computer revolution.  Now that you have isolated the OS down to just a bunch of files that can be moved between physical computers transaprently, you have the ability to provision a machine in a short period of time.  Create a base Virtual Machine image for each of your approved OS’.  Next copy that base OS to create another image for each of your general application types.  You now have a library of images that can copied within seconds to an existing physical machine, booted and viola, a provisioned server in minutes; substantially reducing opex.

Also, since the “data” that the enterprise is already backing up for disaster recovery now contains the applications and operating system, DR takes on a whole new meaning.  (and not just DR, but resource “load balancing”, server maintenance, data center migrations…pretty much all the maintenance work that IT has to do.)  You can take your old machines and deploy them to your DR site. Now use your existing data replication software to replicate the VM files.  When your main data center goes down, just turn on your VMs in the DR data center and back to business.  Sure, performance might not be the same, but the business is functioning; the key point of DR.  And since you used hardware that you already own, your capex is reduced.

“Cloud Computing for the Enterprise”.  That is what one of the CTO’s called virtualization.  As someone who has been living in the cloud for years on the Web 2.0, this is not a shocking way for me to think.  Cloud computing was easy for the web, where you had (or could build) apps out of standard web based (REST based) building blocks.  But for an enterprise architect who has to deal with complicated software packages from properitary vendors that process Billions of dollars in orders, this was a refreshing thing to hear.

Could this type of statement indicate that virtualization and utility computing has arrived for the enterprise?

I think that’s a safe statement.

Filed Under: Tech Industry, Virtualization Tagged With: Cloud Computing, Virtualization

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About latoga labs

With over 25 years of partnering leadership and direct GTM experience, Greg A. Lato provides consulting services to companies in all stages of their partnering journey to Ecosystem Led Growth.