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Hey You Get On To My Cloud

It seems every week someone else is building a cloud and looking for vendors to become the ___ of choice in that cloud.  But I don’t get it.  What’s the big deal, it’s just a remix of the same old song.  In fact, I believe that it goes further back than you think. 

Let’s do the mainframe again
Back in the mid-80’s the consulting house I worked for had one of those real “sales” guys.  He walked me and another consultant into a meeting with a customer to talk to them about this thing called the Internet.  Shocking it was the sales guy who took the reins.  Roughly here is what he said.

“The intranet will allow you to create applications that your customer can access from their own computers.  And those computers don’t need any special software.  All they need is this little browser software and that’s standard on most machines.  The customer then goes to your site and runs what you need.  It’s your computers in house that do all the work.”

I was in shock.  This guy had never heard of the internet only a day before and was driven by wanting to put the team I was on onto another billable gig.  When I confronted him on his knowledge.  He pointed out that It was a mainframe pitch he gave, just replace browser with dummy terminal.

Executives just don’t understand
So as the technology evolved, it wasn’t enough to say internet, intranet, or extranet.  We had the first attempt (3.1?) where we called it an ASP.  But hey, no matter how much we use them, we all hate’s acronyms.  Yes, here was a technology that allowed a company to use an application on the internet to do work inside their own business.  That didn’t last too long.

Next marketing message (3.2), apps on tap (I never heard AOT).  It was edgy with “apps” not “applications” and it got rid of that darn TLA (three letter acronym, for those not in the US).  Yes, here was a technology that allowed a company to use an application on the internet to do work inside their own business.  That didn’t last too long.

Ok what next marketing (3.3), SoA.  Wait a minute didn’t TLA’s fail the first time.  So yes, here again was a technology that allowed a company to use an application on the internet to do work inside their own business.  Surprise that didn’t last too long.

Send in the Clouds
I imagine the meeting went something like this.  Some group of marketers had been out celebrating way to late the morning before an executive keynote.  Their mandate was to finally explain this concept of applications that are not inside the company being used by the company.  Frustration lead to liquid libations and at some point in the early morning hours of a Las Vegas casino, I believe the following conversation took place.

Stop the skipping record and get it Wright
In the end the problem is simple.  The idea of having applications hosted outside the organization is challenging enough from a technical perspective but there’s also a faith perspective.  Those of us that know the technology, know that there is no monumental shift between ASP, Apps on Tap, SoA, and Clouds.  It’s a problem of getting people to believe in trusting their information to someone else.  Changing the name of it every few years makes it harder to build a base of acceptance.

Imagine if the Wright brothers continued to focus on the name of the airplane.  There’s so much other stuff going on inside but we still just call it a airplane.  One name and they stuck with it.  Add flaps, still an airplane.  Put a jet instead of a propeller, still an airplane.  At first people didn’t believe in the ability of a something so heavy to stay up in the air, instead sticking to rail and ship travel.  But every day today people put their faith in a device that’s heavier than anything that makes logical sense to stay in the air.  People spend years learning to fly OR fix OR build an airplane.  But for me all that matters is that I get from Miami to San Francisco in 5 hours not 5 days.

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