Storm Gathers as IBM, Microsoft and Others Talk Cloud Computing
    A couple of things before we start. First off, your editor  isn't the biggest of April Fool's fans, so you won't be getting any fake news  today. Second, we've promised this before, but this time, we mean it: Due to,  well, lots of stuff, RCPU is going to get shorter...pretty much starting today. Try  to keep the cheering to a minimum, please. Anyway.
A new -- or ostensibly new -- computing model is always a  wonderful excuse for an old-fashioned slap-fest between mega-vendors. And so it  is with cloud computing. When something called an Open Cloud Manifesto, which  didn't even appear to be supported by the organization that sponsored it,  appeared Monday, Microsoft immediately (and perhaps unnecessarily)  slammed it. 
Now, Microsoft and IBM, among other big names -- but not Amazon  and Google -- are in some sort of weird negotiations about openness in the cloud  or...something.  (Microsoft and some other big vendors are also trying to convince the  government that cloud computing is secure, but that seems to be another matter  altogether -- one that's mainly driven by hunger for government cloud computing  contracts.) 
Manifestos, calls for standards, oddball negotiations,  meetings among vendors about interoperability...we've seen all this stuff before.  And it mostly means nothing. The fact remains that the market will decide how (or  whether) cloud computing shakes out, whose model wins and whose goes down in  flames. (Either that or one vendor will sabotage the whole market and steal all  the revenues for itself, but we're not going any further with that thought.)
And when companies finally do get comfortable in the clouds  and need to exchange data, the big cloud vendors -- should there be more than one  left -- will find a way to make their systems work together, not out of a  magnanimous sense of friendship but because their customers are chomping at the  bit for a solution. 
That's the technology industry. That's capitalism. That's  the way we like it. "Manifesto" is a very 20th-century word to us, and  not one that has often had a positive connotation. Let's leave it in the past  and move on with the future -- a future of fierce competition and, hopefully,  great innovation.
What's your take on where the cloud is moving? Send it to [email protected]. 
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on April 01, 2009