La nube: ya no estamos en 2012

El informe de predicciones de Forrester de la nube 2018, destaca los importantísimos avances en herramientas de seguridad, análisis y aplicaciones en la nube.

ometimes when experts issue their year-end predictions for the coming 12 months, what proves just as valuable is the ability to sit back and reflect on how the tech sector has reached the point where those predictions mean something to the IT community.

Research firm Forrester is preparing its 2018 predictions for several technology areas, and is releasing its cloud report, Predictions 2018: Cloud Computing Accelerates Enterprise Transformation Everywhere, tomorrow.

Just some of the trends Forrester says to watch for in 2018:

  • A focus on developers breathes new life into private cloud.
  • Cloud applications and development platforms drive culture transformation.
  • SaaS vendors will transform into platform providers and expand deployment options.
  • Kubernetes will win the war for container orchestration dominance.
  • Cloud security will become integrated with, and integral to, cloud platforms.

But wait, what do those predictions mean in the big picture? I interviewed Dave Bartoletti, vice president and principal analyst at Forrester and one of the authors of the cloud report. He discussed how the cloud computing sector and enterprise adoption of cloud have matured over the past five years.

One key finding Bartoletti noted from the report: “In 2018, we’ll cross the significant 50% adoption milestone, and cloud applications, platforms, and services will continue to radically change the way enterprises compete for customers.” While that 50% figure falls short of being a vast majority of organizations and applications, “We’re crossing the tipping point. Three or four years ago, if a company wanted to build a giant network for IoT and connected cars, they might have been able to build it in house. Now the pendulum has swung; does that make sense for any company?” he said.

Think back to the year 2012 when so many IT managers in enterprise organizations simply said, “No way!” when asked about the cloud. Bartoletti noted that during the first six years of Amazon offering AWS, the primary customers were small companies and Bay Area startups. The selling points to those early customers centered on cost — let the cloud provider buy the servers and manage them — and the primary objection on the part of enterprises was about security.

Dave Bartoletti
“Organizations were asking vendors about security, and the answer was, ‘Trust us,'” said Bartoletti. There were tales of IT managers asking a cloud provider where their data would be stored, concerned that important corporate and customer data might be on servers in Russia or unregulated developing nations.

Improved security might be the biggest change in the cloud over the past few years.

“Security is stronger than five years ago,” Bartoletti remarked. “You don’t do that just with technology. The providers had to earn the trust of the compliance teams and regulators in banks and insurance companies,” he added. “The public cloud is already as secure, if not more secure than, private data centers.” He also noted that most publicly known data breaches in recent years have involved on-premise data centers, not public clouds.

Bartoletti described how major cloud players such as AWS, Microsoft and Google today are much more transparent than a few years ago. “They are going out of their way to offer tools so users can test the security of their clouds,” he said. “Last year, for the first time, the number one driver for the public cloud was security.”

Fuente: https://www.informationweek.com