It's actually even better for business than it is for home users. 
Salesforece.com perfect example of that. Have your whole CRM there for secure 
access anywhere, your data is safe, reports are better, advantages go on. Same 
with things like hosted Email Security which the company I work for does let 
the spam filtering happen in the cloud and save 80% of the bandwidth you use on 
email by having that 80% of your email which is spam removed before it gets to 
your pipe. Also cloud computing is awesome for scaling and growing as can be 
seen by amazon web services which are great cloud based services that are 
allowing a lot of business to run entirely on amazon services. If you’re a 
corporation and you can scale from 1 virtual server to 2000 in 5 minutes you 
have advantages in business.

Thanks,
------------------------------------------
Ali Mesdaq (CISSP, GIAC-GREM)
Sr. Security Researcher
Websense Security Labs
http://www.WebsenseSecurityLabs.com
------------------------------------------


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Thane Sherrington
Sent: Wednesday, July 08, 2009 10:18 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [H] [Bulk] Re: Google OS

At 01:51 PM 08/07/2009, Mesdaq, Ali wrote:
>Gotta disagree with both you guys on that one. Cloud computing 
>definitely has major advantages over local for various things. Not 
>all things but for example storage. I rather have a google doc 
>hosted by google that will never get lost to a harddrive crash than 
>a locally stored doc. I can also see big promise in things like 
>http://www.onlive.com/ for gaming. Cloud can't replace everything 
>but it can replace a few things really well. I personally wouldn't 
>mind having a lightweight computer that boots off a flash image in 2 
>seconds and connects to the web for accessing my files and basic 
>functionality. Something I never have to worry about for 
>maintenance. That would be the ultimate web surfing platform. Give 
>one of those computers to your family and never have to worry about 
>fixing it ever!

For the vast majority of people, a cloud based PC makes sense - they 
are only surfing and emailing anyway, so if their internet connection 
is down, they are dead in the water anyway.  But I'm thinking more 
for business applications.

T 




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