Google and IBM to Provide Cloud Computing to Students
John "butter/oreo" Bajana-Bacall writes to tell us that IBM and Google have decided to team up to provide cloud computing resources to participating college students. "Most of the innovation in cloud computing has been led by corporations, but industry executives and computer scientists say a shortage of skills and talent could limit future growth. 'We in academia and the government labs have not kept up with the times,' said Randal E. Bryant, dean of the computer science school at Carnegie Mellon University. 'Universities really need to get on board.' Six universities will be involved in the initiative. They are Carnegie Mellon, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Stanford University, the University of California, Berkeley, the University of Maryland and the University of Washington."
While I'm glad they're opening this up to top universities before businesses, I would think that both companies should probably open this up to open source development as well. While dealing with real hardware is ultimately a must for any serious package, it would be nice to have a way to get a package off the ground without killing local resources (not to mention potential advantages in version control).
-proidiot
often wonder what form modern computing would be in today if the personal computer had not been so wide accepted. Look around you at the walls. Some of the things you see are very ubiquitous. People take electrical outlets and phone jacks for granted. It is just part of the infrastructure we are used to. Now imagine a computer port next to all the rest. All you need is simple input(keyboard,mouse) and simple output(monitor,printer) devices attached to an adapter that plugs into this outlet. That is all you would need to know about computing. Computing power would be offered by a "Computer Utility" company. They would handle all the technical details. You simply pay your bill and the "technical goodness" comes down the line.
That was Control Data's vision of computing, circa 1967. One supercomputer per city. There's a paper on this in, I think, AFIPS FJCC for 1967. General Electric Time Sharing Services was providing something like that by 1968. The whole "time sharing" business tanked by the end of the 1970s.
That and SOA is pretty vague. I don't know where you're getting your particular definition from, but there are lots of competing ones; you can include a lot under the umbrella of "service" within "service-oriented architecture." It doesn't refer just to web services or even just to software and IT.
"Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."