Jack Coats <[email protected]> wrote:
> Rich, your post reminded me of this sticker I saw:
> 
> (There is no cloud, it's just someone else's computer)

;-) Amusing but not quite a precise description of the dominant industry trend 
happening to data centers. The "cloud" is actually software-defined and 
software-implemented replacements -- coupled with automated provisioning APIs 
-- for (almost) all of the hardware I used to buy from the likes of Dell, 
Cisco, F5, Isilon, and so forth.

Cloud security breaches that I've seen so far are different from those at data 
centers, which provide separate out-of-band management subnets. I've seen 
script-kiddies who grep through github and other sites for carelessly-posted 
API keys, and then crank up as many compute instances as the vendor allows, to 
run whatever rogue software they're seeking to run (probably Bitcoin-mining, 
though maybe less of that now that it's gotten harder). A more-sophisticated 
hacker could do a lot more harm than simply racking up a big compute bill.

So my point about fighting last year's war is that for most of us who do more 
or less the same job of infra management as we did 10 years ago, the products 
we were familiar with back then are utterly irrelevant in 2015. Those are the 
products you still see on most  cert-compliance approved-product lists. 

The cloud is different in nature, different enough that despite my decades in 
the industry, I couldn't have predicted how these APIs would come to be 
defined, and how complex they've gotten to be. Apparently few others foresaw 
this either; one company managed to get about a 7-year head start on all the 
others, who are still begging customer prospects to revisit their discounted 
compute-instance price list. The Cloud, properly defined, is a software-defined 
model of resources needed to replace EVERY component you'd ever want in a 
private physical data center. That's been achieved by only one vendor.

I think I'm digressing from original topic by a substantial margin, but 
eventually those of us who fancy bigger NAS boxes for our homes will turn our 
attention to cloud-based equivalents. Those potential rival cloud vendors are 
going to have to wake up from a standing stop, toss out OpenStack and all the 
other cruft, and develop a simpler, faster, cheaper solution to entice us home 
and small-biz users.

-rich
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