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CIO Jury: No cloud in our future

Julian Goldsmith silicon.com | March 25, 2009 12:50 PM PDT

Summary

Cloud computing has been given a definite thumbs down by silicon.com's CIO Jury when asked whether cloud computing is part of their IT strategy to cut costs.
Cloud computing has been given a definite thumbs down by silicon.com's CIO Jury.

Following exclusive silicon.com research that found IT leaders voting cloud computing the most over-hyped technology of the year, the CIO Jury was asked whether cloud computing is part of their IT strategy to cut costs.

The jury came back with a 'no' majority of 10 to two.

Alistair Behenna, CIO at Harvey Nash, is one of the two CIOs using the cloud to cut costs.

"Given the current economic massacre we are all engaged in, it has to be a viable strand in any IT strategy fabric," he said. "[The cloud is] certainly not the whole solution but it is undeniably useful for specific areas of the infrastructure and service delivery."

Peter Pedersen, CTO of Figleaves.com, said cloud computing is part of his strategy for now, but it is subject to ongoing review.

"We are looking closely at where the cost/benefits really are, especially as suppliers of soft/hardware become more open for cost discussions during the downturn," he said.

However, most CIOs are yet to embrace the cloud, for a number of reasons. For David Supple, head of IT at Ecotec Research & Consulting, security remains an issue.

"The security questions are still far too unresolved for us to have confidence in it, and for us to pass the confidence on to our public sector clients," he said.

Despite the comprehensive 'no' vote, some CIOs expect that the cloud will indeed play a part in their future tech plans.

Ben Acheson, IT manager of PADS Printing and Commercial Stationery, believes cloud computing will become part of his strategy once the wrinkles have been ironed out.

"It needs to become more sophisticated, more secure and more reliable. Above all it needs to be tried and tested before it will catch on. In the meantime I'm keeping my eye on the technology because in my view it represents the future," he said.

For Nicholas Bellenberg, IT director at Hachette Filipacchi, no tech should be dismissed out of hand.

"If you are assessing solutions on their merits, there is no need to rule anything out of being provided from the cloud, as long as you are happy that you will not be let down by circumstances beyond your control," he said.

"Practically every technology that is sold is over-hyped. It's part of the job of a CIO/IT director to ask the insightful questions and sort the wheat from the chaff."

This CIO Jury was:

* Ben Acheson, IT manager, PADS Printing and Commercial Stationery
* Mark Beattie, head of information technology, London Waste
* Alistair Behenna, CIO, Harvey Nash
* Nicholas Bellenberg, IT director, Hachette Filipacchi (UK)
* Chris Broad, head of information systems and technology, UKAEA
* Pete Crowe, IT director, Fat Face
* Madhushan Gokool, IT manager, Storm Model Management
* Steve Gediking, head of IT and facilities, Independent Police Complaints Commission
* Paul Haley, director of information technology, University of Aberdeen
* Peter Pedersen, chief technology officer, Figleaves.com
* Mike Roberts, IT director, The London Clinic
* David R Supple, head of IT, Ecotec Research & Consulting

This article was originally posted on silicon.com.

Talkback Most Recent of 3 Talkback(s)

  • It will happen
    While the largest companies (Fortune 500) may run internal clouds, I am confident others will eventually run almost everything in the cloud.

    Security is an impediment. Surely from Amazon and others we will see some advanced VPN/virtual firewall offerings for their services over time?

    I am not convinced reliability is a problem -- internal systems go down too.

    Migration is work, as the way one writes apps changes: adoption will take time.

    Dwight/10gen.com/mongodb.org
    ZDNet Gravatar
    dwight_10gen
    27th Mar 2009
  • Smart Money is NOT in Cloud Technology
    Anyone with an sliver of brains knows that its not safe. Just like wireless isnt safe.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    VoiceOfLogic
    27th Mar 2009
  • RE: CIO Jury: No cloud in our future
    You CIO's keep humping on those IBM 370's cranking out the bits. Or their blade equivalents. Yeah, there is loss of control, yeah there are major league security issues, yeah one has to be connected to make it work.

    But to dismiss the concept so clearly with the "most overhyped" label is to earn the term "luddite". Noone is saying embrace and trust The Force but I would be worried about stopping my mind from considering anything that would help my organization get better IT at lower cost -- where this is it or not.

    Just a note -- I have no financial or other interests in "cloud", "Web 2.0", etc.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    TomMariner
    30th Mar 2009

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