Top 5 Cloud Computing Predictions For 2011

In the coming year, the cloud will reach milestones that critics said it never would: it will be certifiably secure for credit card transactions; able to host multiple virtual machine types in the same infrastructure; and easier to manage.

Charles Babcock, Editor at Large, Cloud

December 21, 2010

2 Min Read

Slideshow: Cloud Security Pros And Cons

Slideshow: Cloud Security Pros And Cons


Slideshow: Cloud Security Pros And Cons (click image for larger view and for full slideshow)

5. Snappy Cloud Application Integration

As cloud environments proliferate and cloud access becomes an easier thing to manage, there will remain a nagging problem of getting one application to work with another, both in the public cloud, such as EC2, or the hybrid cloud, say between EC2 and a virtualized section of an enterprise data center. This was a big problem on premises; it gets bigger in the cloud.

New companies are likely to spring up to take advantage of the setting that the cloud itself offers. For example, SnapLogic, which just received $10 million in funding from Andreesen-Horowith and Floodgate in early December, puts its integration-building SnapLogic Server in the cloud, and urges customers to bring their integration needs to it.

If a user wants to connect his internal accounting system to, say, his Salesforce.com sales force automation system, SnapLogic provides (or he can build) a connector or "snap" between the accounting system and SnapLogic Server. The server has its own connectors to Salesforce.com, SAP, Oracle E-Business Suite, and other applications. At least half of the integration problem has been solved in an automated fashion; in many cases, the whole connection can be quickly established. If the data needs to be converted as it moves from one application to the other, SnapLogic Server recognizes that and automatically executes the reformatting.

The connection problem is the sleeper in the cloud. After you get there, how do you connect to standard package applications or even custom code without incurring a lot of work? SnapLogic, which recognizes the inherent value of the cloud setting, or other solutions like it, may be a big part of the answer.

SEE ALSO:

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Amazon EC2 Achieves Payment Industry Certification

Credit Card Transactions Likely In Future Public Clouds

Global CIO: An Open Letter To Oracle CEO Larry Ellison

Global CIO: Larry Ellison Swaps Cloud Rants For Cloud Love With Exalogic

Oracle Applications Now Available In Amazon's EC2 Cloud

Attachmate To Acquire Novell For $2.2 Billion

Amazon Adds CloudWatch Monitoring, Other Services

CloudSleuth Monitors Cloud Performance

Hyperic Monitoring Tightens Integration With VMware Console

Verizon Intros Cloud Computing For SMBs

Verizon Announces Cloud EMR Platform

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About the Author(s)

Charles Babcock

Editor at Large, Cloud

Charles Babcock is an editor-at-large for InformationWeek and author of Management Strategies for the Cloud Revolution, a McGraw-Hill book. He is the former editor-in-chief of Digital News, former software editor of Computerworld and former technology editor of Interactive Week. He is a graduate of Syracuse University where he obtained a bachelor's degree in journalism. He joined the publication in 2003.

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