How Increasing Cloud Reliance Affects IT Jobs
snydeq writes "Kevin Fogarty takes a look at how the rise of cloud computing will impact IT jobs, outlining which roles stand to gain prominence in the years to come, and which roles will suffer as organizations extend their commitments to the cloud. 'Ultimately the bulk of IT could look more like a projects office than the way it looks now, when most of the hands-on work is done inside. It probably won't be a total transformation, but moving into cloud, there will be more of that and less DIY.'"
Your business is dead in the water.
If that only happens 2 days a year, you just factor that as a cost unless there is some critical reason you must remain up (hospital).
Also, it becomes difficult to differentiate your business from others.
As jobs get completely slaughtered something has to give. Shorter work weeks or civil unrest.
She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
The Cloud offers a lot of advantages over conventional IT:
o Scalability when you want it.
o No need to deal with the payroll of admins.
o Guaranteed service levels.
o Actual security. There has yet to be a breach with a cloud provider. Plus, this is what SLAs are for.
o Money savings by not having to have a server room, with the attendant HVAC, power, and security requirements.
o Not handcuffed to OS, application, and database versions.
o No need to concern about if running the latest Exchange versions.
o No need to deal with backups and the attendant infrastructure.
For a midsized company, one would be a fool not to go with cloud based services. Cloud security has shown itself to be excellent. The only people who complain about the cloud are those with a vested interest in the old style of running things. Kick the old server guys to the curb -- technology moves on, and businesses don't need to have server rooms anymore, just like businesses don't need TTYs and printers attached to terminals. Businesses don't even need to care what a server looks like. The cloud provider which has advantages of economies of scale can deal with that.
The problem with the "cloud" is that you put your complete trust in
a. the cloud provider
b. the telco that connects you to the cloud
As anyone who has ever had to deal with outside vendors knows, they have no real commitment to your business. You are a single account.
When your business cannot connect to the systems, it is a crisis for your business.
For them, it is another day in the office.
You mean the ones that keep having multiday outages? Yeah like I believe that will be 40-50% of new IT spend in only 4 years...
My org is fairly pro SaaS but we just got hit by a half day outage with Salesforce on the golive day for a new solution that of course uses Salesforce as the user interface. That was egg on our face that we couldn't fix and which made quite a few people sit up and take notice. I'm not sure that it's a death nail for new projects being based around cloud/SaaS here but significantly more downtime and it's going to be a serious risk flagged by project sponsors and auditors.
There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
When the systems were in your office, you had X number of points of failure.
And you had someone on site who's job it was to make sure that those systems were available to you.
So you're moving to the "cloud" to save money ... by increasing the number of the points of failure.
So then you add additional systems to mitigate the problems that come with the "cloud". And you probably outsource the maintenance of those systems as well.
And everything is fine until there is a problem. At which point you realize that all the people who you depend upon to keep your systems working only see you as another account. If your business fails, then they're out a portion of their income (until they replace the account with another one).
Don't worry, in a few years a new company will come along, with a great new product that will allow you to cheaply pull the information back into your organisation, handing power back to users, distributing access and design.
This will then be followed by a period of great excitement, with some people making themselves rich, but then that company will become large and bloated, creating more and more bloated systems, and then we'll be sending our information back out to a "central" system.
try to make ends meet, you're a slave to money, then you die