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For Vendor Strategy Professionals

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November 21, 2008

There Are Two Types Of Compute Clouds

Server Clouds And Scale-Out Clouds Serve Very Different Customer Needs

by Frank E. Gillett

with Eric G. Brown, Christina Lee

Average:
10 
(3 ratings)

This is an excerpt

Executive Summary

Cloud computing is a confusing topic for vendor strategists. One reason? Most of us confuse two fundamentally different types of compute clouds as one. Server clouds support the needs of traditional business apps while scale-out clouds are designed for massive, many-machine workloads such as Web sites or grid compute applications. Scale-out clouds differ from server clouds in five key ways: 1) much larger workloads; 2) loosely coupled software architecture; 3) fault tolerance in software, not hardware; 4) simple state management; and 5) server virtualization is for provisioning flexibility — not machine sharing. Strategists must update their server virtualization plans to embrace the evolution to server cloud, while developing a separate strategy to compete in the arena for scale-out clouds.

This is an excerpt

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