Cloud Computing – Is it just a bunch of fluff?

Yes, pun was intended.

I have serious doubts about the “cloud” computing concept recently and that it’s a failed concept.  We have yet to see a successful execution of the cloud hosting idea to the point where there is a stable solution in place with such a level of redundancy that applications and websites are not down for any reason.  I’ve experienced outages with Mosso lately that I’ve become discontent with.  The reasoning behind choosing a company like Media Temple, Mosso or Amazon EC2 services is so that you are not experiencing downtime…ever.  

I’m stuck in a difficult place, because I realize the outage discovery phase’s necessity in determining a cause of failure, however, it’s been hours and nobody’s found anything…that sorta causes you to wonder if the idea of cloud computing really works (or at least if it’s been implemented correctly at the datacenter layer).  I know that things don’t just break on their own typically, and so I’m curious if someone rolled out an update that went bad, a switch dead (hey, hardware fails – I get it).  My next question would be: “why did they roll it out before testing in a beta environment?”.

I have optimistically waited for stability in the Mosso cloud hosting service that we’re unfortunately realizing is not there.  Maybe someday down the line it will be, but we’re faced with a scenario where I spoke up for Mosso to sell it to us internally since I have long-favored the Rackspace brand.  I figured that with Rackspace’s financial and infrastructure backing, that it might come with the same types of safety nets we’ve become used to with Rackspace in terms of high availability application hosting.

I’m not normally one to pull the plug inadvertently, but this has become somewhat habitual (8 incidents within the past 7-day week).  Those aren’t exactly excellent percentages.  I think instead of the SliceHost purchase and rolling out of the CloudFS service, Rackspace should be focusing on the stability of the current idea/concept of cloud hosting to make it rock solid before presuming to add more services to a foundation that hasn’t proven itself as 100% stable.

I have a lot of love for the Rackspace family and have been working with their teams both directly and indirectly for 7+ years.  I don’t intend to bow out completely, but I’m not sure it’s logical for us to continue to place trust in Mosso with the types of outages this past 3-6 months.

Maybe I have an incorrect view of what cloud hosting actually is supposed to be.  I imagine that if one piece of the equation is unavailable, that the others failover pieces are are able to serve content, justifying that the services are never really offline to the end user requesting the content.  In my opinion, no services can come offline using this method.  The idea that there is an infrastructure so robust in place behind the scenes is one that will execute this properly.

What do you think?

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4 Responses to “Cloud Computing – Is it just a bunch of fluff?”

  • Raymond says:

    Great observation. After going public, you have to prove to investors that you are growing. What better way than to turn to M&A for a growth story. Their cloud architecture still has several “single-point of failure” issues in the design causing stability issues.

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  • PhilR says:

    This is not a new concept, just some new technologies being “thrown” at it. For decades, the “cloud” was a convenient metaphor used by the telecommunications industry to hide a mosh pit of acronyms. Today, it’s used to describe a methodology for the delivery of computer services and applications; you don’t need to know what’s in there, only that it gives you something you want. That is neither new nor profound. In the 1970s it was timesharing. More recently it has been called on-demand or utility computing.

    Bottom line is, with any data center running business critical applications, whether those applications are critical to your business or someone else’s, these applications and underlying hardware platform need to be up. Without access to your data, it’s more of a “fog” then a cloud…

  • Will says:

    “The Hosting Fog” – I like that. Feels like what we’ve had so far from any vendor. Thanks for the detailed response. It’s nice to see it’s not just me that’s noticing this.

    I hear people ranting and raving about “cloud” this and that, but nobody really challenging the technology or concept to hold true to what it’s promised.