Gartner: Internal clouds are coming
Gartner analyst Tom Bittman is predicting "that the future of corporate IT is in private clouds, essentially flexible computing networks modeled after public providers such as Google and Amazon, yet built and managed internally for each business's users."
While it's true that most enterprises can't replicate the economies of scale that Google and Microsoft have, most companies do have spare computing capacity that can be used as part of an internal cloud.
I've written many times about the need for a virtualized layer--one that separates the platforms and the applications. Gartner agrees and calls this concept a "meta operating system."
Specifically, the meta operating system is "a virtualization layer between applications and distributed computing resources ... that utilizes distributed computing resources to perform scheduling, loading, initiating, supervising applications and error handling."
Bittman also stated that "within five years, a huge percentage of small businesses will get most of their computing resources from external cloud providers," which I would agree with--especially considering that anything that runs on the Internet (e.g., hosted e-mail) in what were formerly known as application service providers are now considered cloud providers.
Clouds will clearly be important and will be clearly be split between internal and external sources. However, the market needs to catch up a bit more both in terms of understanding the use cases and the economic models.
Dave Rosenberg dishes up "Software, Interrupted" with nearly 15 years of technology and marketing experience that spans from Bell Labs to multiple start-up IPOs to open-source enterprise software companies. He is co-founder of MuleSource and currently serves as the general manager of Hardy Way. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure. You can contact Dave via e-mail at softwareinterrupted@gmail.com or follow him on Twitter @daveofdoom. 





OU environment is moving towards engineering for every machine connecting to our servers and applications is considered to be mobile and can attach from anywhere, anywhen.
We provide citrix, webmail, MS OCS services, VPN's etc for a variety of connection levels. Virtual desktops are next where users will just browse to a desktop using a web browser, and the desktops are provisioned dynamically on demand.
This scales very rapidly, and means we can use any client, and users can work from anywhere with everything they need.