As a technology provider that helps application companies embrace cloud computing by virtualizing the applications to run on any cloud, I was a bit disappointed with Google's AppEngine announcement. It appears that Google is embracing the “walled garden” approach of salesforce.com and Microsoft instead of the cloud approach of Amazon. I believe that walled gardens will ultimately be overshadowed by clouds because you cannot achieve webscale computing if every application has to run on a server owned by Google.
Historically, Google has been very good about providing APIs that enable applications to access its web services independent of the computer on which they run. This is an important concept because it is often the case that an application needs to run on a particular network or network segment in order to preserve some critical aspect of performance or security. It is also important because it provides developers with the broadest choice of system and programming tools when developing or maintaining their applications. If you must program the application in the Python implementation specified by Google and run it on a Google server in order to take advantage of services like BigTable and Sawzall, a huge segment of the application market has just been eliminated from consideration (note that it is unclear to me at this time if Big Table and Sawzall can be accessed independent of appengine).
Why not simply expose a virtual machine API (such as Amazon Machine Image) along with the API for the web services (such as Amazon's S3, SQS, etc.)? Application instances that require minimal latency to Google services are provisioned as virtualized appliances on a Google server. For applications that need to run on a different network, you can provision the same system definition to that network while accessing the web services over the Internet. Write the program in any language you choose. With any set of system components that you choose.
The problem with walled gardens is that they ultimately restrict the growth of the market. While it is true that an attractive and well manicured walled garden will result in asymetrically large economic rent for the owner of the garden (witness Microsoft), the size of the market is nonetheless constrained. It seems to me that Google would reap the greatest benefit from maximizing the market for cloud applications quickly – independent of their ability to collect an asymetrically large portion of the rent from that market. Even their marketing of the current implementation of appengine indicates this hypothesis is correct – it is free. Success with cloud computing will no doubt lead to a decline in the value of the Microsoft system software franchise (the ultimate walled garden). Why not accelerate that decline with broad market capability instead of yet another walled garden (YAWG)?
Let me provide a concrete example. rPath was approached by a SaaS application provider to help them release their on-demand application as an on-premise application – without sacrificing management control of the system software. They want on-premise capability in order to meet the data security requirements of a certain segment of the market which they have been unable to penetrate with their SaaS offering. Their current application runs on Microsoft server technology, but it is written in Java so skipping out of the Microsoft walled garden was pretty trivial. We provided them with a virtualized implementation of their application, and we demonstrated how it could run on a local network atop a hypervisor, or as a variable cost implementation on Amazon's elastic compute cloud (EC2). Their reaction was so positive that they are now planning to gradually migrate their entire infrastructure from Microsoft to virtual infrastructure in order to seamlessly deliver the application via SaaS, variable cost cloud (Amazon), and local network (virtual appliance). Without changing their preference for programming language. Without sacrificing control of the system software layer.
To be fair to Google, appengine is a beta service. I have no doubt that they made compromises in architecture in order to get the service out the door more quickly. I hope they follow Amazon's lead and expose all of their great services as true web services while enabling any application to run close to those services via a simple virtualization spec such as Amazon's AMI. The faster we take the market to cloud computing, the sooner we can kill off the walled gardens through webscale shadows that deprive them of economic sunlight.
About Billy Marshall Prior to founding rPath, Billy served as Red Hat?s Vice President of North America Sales from 2001 until 2005.Billy conceived and oversaw the launch of Red Hat Network, the platform that enabled Red Hat?s subscription revenue model. Billy also worked in IBM Global Services where he worked with global leaders such as Boeing, Ford, Eaton, Mercedes Benz, and Raytheon.
James Urquhart wrote: "I
believe that walled
gardens will ultimately
be overshadowed by clouds
because you cannot
achieve webscale
computing if every
application has to run on
a server owned by
Google."
Um...but...Google is kind
of the *definition* of
webscale computing, isn't
it? If they can't scale
your application, who
can?
Also, is an open source
API still a walled
garden? If 5 businesses
are build that replicate
the Google model in other
datacenters (including,
perhaps, EC2...already
done in prototype), then
haven't the walls
crumbled?
I, alternatively, see the
problem as one of Google
building its own "solar
system", with a cluster
of options centered
around its model.
Amazon, too, has
proprietary lock-in (the
AMI--though this seems to
be opening up some), so
it is also building its
own "solar system". Have ...
Neil Mansilla wrote: I've
been working and
deploying applications on
the Web since 1994. I've
gone from shared hosting
on SGI boxes, to
dedicated hosting, to
co-location with Verio
and Level3 (still have a
couple racks full of
equipment running there).
I've decided to launch my
latest Web/mobile app on
AWS (Amazon Web
Services),
[http://ahTXT.com/
ahTXT.com (eBay auction
monitoring and wireless
alerts)] because of this
primary reason: I no
longer wish to manage
hardware.
Amazon's EC2 is
fantsatic.. even their
smallest instance class
is a high-performance
server. However, all
fancy-fluff and
buzz-terms aside, EC2, at
the end of the day, is
just a virtual server.
Your instance is just a
Xen image. This means
that at the end of the
day, unless you implement
some type of management
solution (or outsource
this to a ma...
Bert Armijo wrote: I
agree in principle, but
IMHO your argument is
somewhat myopic. It's
certainly clear why, as
CEO of rPath, AppEngine
is a walled garden to
you. However, to be fair,
I'm sure F5 or Checkpoint
would see AWS as equally
closed. As would many
other vendors who's
products don't fit easily
into Amazon's unique AMI
and storage model.
A more wholistic view of
cloud computing is needed
that allows for simple
specification of
requirements and
interfaces so users can
build applications and
services that span the
cloud.
Troy Tolle wrote: I am in
agreement here. I was
excited to see Google
jump in offering a
computing infrastructure
for their users, but I
was disappointed that we
could not use more than
python. We have been
using Amazon Web Services
for 2 years for
DigitalChalk and I was
hoping to see some
interesting alternatives
pop up from Google. I
think Google does have
the right idea of handing
scale transparently for
the user. This is a
great plus and a move
that is welcomed but I
would like to see other
languages such as PHP and
Java supported.
IONA has announced that
Chariot Solutions has
become a FUSE Partner.
Chariot Solutions, as a
FUSE Partner, will resell
IONA's FUSE family of
Open Source services and
solutions to address
customers' enterprise
Open Source requirements.
IONA announced that
Chariot Solutions has
become a FUSE Partner.
Chariot Solutions, as a
FUSE Partner, will resell
IONA's FUSE family of
Open Source services and
solutions to address
customers' enterprise
Open Source requirements.
As a FUSE Partner,
Chariot Solutions'
consulting custom
As predictable as the bet
that night will follow
day, Apple sued a little
widely watched wannabe
Mac cloner in Florida
called Psystar that's
been selling a $399 box
called Open Computer for
the last few months.
Red Hat announced that
InfoCamere, an
organization responsible
for managing the IT
systems that connect and
secure over 100 Italian
Chambers of Commerce,
relies on Red Hat and
JBoss solutions for
flexibility, reliability
and ease of use for its
mission-critical systems.
Citrix has tapped its VP
of channels and emerging
product sales Al
Monserrat to replace its
departing sales chief
John Burris, who, as
previously reported, is
going to Sourcefire as
CEO. A couple of years
ago Monserrat was
responsible for Citrix'
North American sales.
Meanwhile, Citrix
Zoho, the online Office
wannabe, has gotten
Swisscom, the telephone
side of the old Swiss PTT
monopoly, to offer its
300,000 business
customers a suite of
Zoho's SaaS applications
as part of a six-month
pilot through its Teamnet
portal. The Zoho Business
suite, including Zoho
Writer, S
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