News
        
        Bad Economy Good for Cloud Computing, Microsoft Exec Says
        
        
        
			- By Jim Barthold
 - 02/11/2009
 
		
        A weakened economy will serve as a catalyst to push enterprises  from on-premise computing to accessing services over the Internet cloud, according  to Microsoft exec Doug Hauser, who delivered an address on Wednesday at the  Thomas Weisel 2009 Technology and Telecom Conference.
Hauser is general manager of business strategy, cloud  infrastructure services, at Microsoft. He said it was pretty much accepted that  the small-to-medium business and consumer spaces are "looking at [cloud  computing] adoption anyway, regardless of the economic climate." 
Enterprises are taking a pragmatic approach to using hosted  applications, especially with regard to security and privacy. They will  probably move some of their less sensitive chores, such as back up and restore,  disaster recovery and computational functions, into the cloud relatively  quickly, Hauser suggested. 
He added, though, "your core line-of-business financial  services applications won't be going into the cloud relatively soon, unless it's  a private cloud."
Microsoft supports such moves too, providing help with  private clouds that require a little more security. Microsoft acts either as a primary  service provider or works with its partners, especially those with security  clearances.
"This is a beautiful partner opportunity, where  separate from the [Microsoft] Azure [IP cloud computing] platform...we could  help them with our technologies in their data centers and they could then  provide that cloud service," Hauser said. "That is a perfect partner  opportunity in this space."
During a Q&A session after a brief presentation  outlining Azure, Hauser made it clear that Microsoft is serious about its cloud  computing program and will make money immediately from offering it. To  demonstrate how an off-premises solution can pay off for both Microsoft and an  enterprise, Hauser described an Exchange implementation where an on-premise  cost is $18 a month per user for the software, of which Microsoft gets $3.
"For Exchange Online, we charge $10 a month per user  per seat, so our net gain is $7," he said. "The customer actually  saves $8. There's a huge benefit to the customer; there's a benefit to us.  There are very similar economics to have developer services in the cloud  similar to those sorts of online services."
The cloud, he said, is not becoming crowded, although it  seems that every day a new company joins the space. In ten years, Hauser  predicted there would be "two, three, four, something like that"  companies competing for cloud business.
"This is a brand new space. Everyone is entering this  space in a very new fashion," he said.
Microsoft's fashion is to combine the best elements of two  general approaches: a low-end model that delivers a broad set of resources and  sets the enterprise free to use them, and a tighter model of offering "pure  cloud services" that the enterprise can develop to, with limited control  of the resources beneath that.
"Microsoft has come out with a unique approach in that  we span that continuum," he said, providing some service-level guarantees  but adding in a simplified management that "that takes you into this pure-play  cloud services realm."
If Hauser was cautious at any point discussing Azure's  potential, it happened when he was asked about migrating current on-premises applications  into the cloud, especially as it relates to older applications.
"If you have an application on premises, you don't want  to just move it to the cloud the way it is on premises because the cost savings  will not be as large [than] if you actually take advantage of the automated  systems management in the cloud," he said.
While unwilling to offer up "specific numbers" of  the percentage and types of apps moving into the cloud, Hauser was relatively  confident that "the first things that will move and move rather quickly  are things like Exchange messaging, SharePoint collaboration and all those  types of more infrastructure things."
It didn't take Microsoft long to get ready for those moves,  he said.
"From the Microsoft development, it was a relatively  quick development," Hauser said. "We actually developed the product  in about 18 months from start to…where we are now."    
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Jim Barthold is a freelance writer based in Delanco, N.J.   covering a variety of technology subjects.