That's a good example of what may be a hybrid cloud: hosted by a larger
part of the org, yet accessed as a hosted service.

 

Are you provisioning your own apps or using a SOA in the true sense of
cloud, or is more along the lines of web-apps and databases... a more
traditional ISP model?

 

-sc

 

From: John Hornbuckle [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Tuesday, November 17, 2009 11:22 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Cloud computing... your opinions

 

Others have already offered great input-things like vetting the cloud
vendor to ensure security is what it needs to be (both for internal
needs and regulatory purposes), and planning/maintaining an exit
strategy from the start.

 

Our most mission-critical data as a school district is our finance/HR
data and our student records. We *already* store this data in the cloud;
it's housed at a data center at Florida State University and we access
it across the Internet. Their data center has huge generators, redundant
high-speed connections, off-site backups and peering agreements in New
York, and is built to withstand a category 5 hurricane. There's no way
we could do all of that ourselves. Only through taking advantage of
economies of scale-which is one of the two huge benefits of cloud
computing (in addition to availability from any machine/location that
has Internet connectivity)-can we accomplish this.

 

As for Tim's concern that cloud computing makes organizations one wrong
backhoe dig from shutting down... Well, we're already in that position,
even with the data we host ourselves. Our schools tie back to our
network operations center via fiber, and if their fiber gets cut they
lose access to that data. So for us, moving data to the cloud doesn't
present much additional risk in that regard. Our Internet connectivity
is reliable enough that we're comfortable using the cloud on an
increasing basis.

 

 

 

John Hornbuckle

MIS Department

Taylor County School District

318 North Clark Street

Perry, FL 32347

 

www.taylor.k12.fl.us

 

 

 

 

From: Alex Eckelberry [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Tuesday, November 17, 2009 10:05 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Cloud computing... your opinions

 

We're working on cloud computing initiatives (like everyone), and I'm
also doing a fair amount of research into the area.  (Of course, the
whole idea of "cloud computing" is itself fairly silly, when it's just a
renaming of the concept of a network-connected computer.  But whatever,
it's the hot topic.)

 

There are areas where it makes sense, such as email filtering.  Web
filtering, well maybe not so much.  CRM (like SalesForce.com), makes
sense.  

 

I'm curious -- what are your thoughts on cloud computing?  What might be
the security questions you would ask your cloud computing vendors?
What irks you about it?  What is good about it? 

 

 

Alex

 

Alex Eckelberry, CEO 
Sunbelt Software
33 N. Garden Avenue, Clearwater, FL 33755 p: 727-562-0101 x220 
e: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>  MSN:
[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>  
w: www.sunbeltsoftware.com <http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com>  b:
www.sunbeltblog.com <http://www.sunbeltblog.com> 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
 
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