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Cloud Computing. Jonathan Weitz Bus: 550 June 3, 2013. Agenda. Scope of case file(s) Case 1: What is Cloud Computing? Modeling the Cloud Cloud Economics Case 2: Economics of Cloud Computing US Gov. Thoughts, Comments, Questions. Cases. Modeling the Economic Impact of Cloud Computing
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Cloud Computing Jonathan Weitz Bus: 550 June 3, 2013
Agenda • Scope of case file(s) • Case 1: What is Cloud Computing? • Modeling the Cloud • Cloud Economics • Case 2: Economics of Cloud Computing US Gov. • Thoughts, Comments, Questions
Cases • Modeling the Economic Impact of Cloud Computing • Australian Information Industry Association • Lays a foundation of what cloud computing is , how it is constructed and the potential economic costs and benefits of a shift in ideology from traditional computing to “Cloud Computing” • Economics of Cloud Computing • Addresses the economic implications of US government mirgration to a Cloud Based network for Information Technology
What is the Cloud? • Cloud computing relies on sharing resources in order to achieve economies of scale and gain greater coherence. • Maximizes the effectiveness as compared to traditional computing. • Example idea: • Cloud facility which serves European users during European business hours with a specific application (eg. email) while the same resources are getting reallocated and serve North American users during local business hours with another application (eg. web server).
Modelling the Cloud • Cloud computing has four deployment types: • Private – Exclusive use by a single organization (may be outsourced to a 3rd part provider, but sole use is for the single org.) • Public – For use by multiple organizations on a shared basis nad hosted by a 3rd part provider (Amazon & Google Apps) • Community – For use by a group of related organizations • Hybrid – A single oganization adopts a private and blupic model cloud to use the benefits of both applications
Service Models for Cloud Computing • Software as a service – Google Apps • Platform as a service – Microsoft Office 365 • Infrastructure as a service – Amazon EC2 & S3
Cloud Computing Economic Benefits • Most identifiable economic benefit of cloud computing is direct cost savings, which occur from changes within the organization and the data centers that house the IT infrastructure. • Supply Side – Large scale data centers lower cost due to superior buying power • Demand Side – Allowing multiple users across varying industries regions & time zones allowing for server utilization • Multi-user efficiency – Increasing # of users lowers server cost per tenant • Data center efficiency – Advanced data center designs reduce power loss and improved cooling
Case Study: Economics of Cloud Computing US Gov. • Public Cloud Adopters: most likely early adopters • Department migrates to an IT public cloud • Low level of mission, bureau, (Dep of Commerce, Labor, EPA, Dep. of transportation) • Assumptions: Transition will occur over 3 years, workload is constant • Hybrid Cloud: middle adopters • Department builds a private cloud solution to handle majority of its IT load but uses a public solutions for low sensitivity apps • Dep of Agriculture, Dep of Education, NSF • 75 % of the IT server workload will migrate to private and 25 % will be transitioned to public cloud steadily over 3 years • Private Cloud: Late adopters • Department or agency build own private solution or joins in an interagency cloud • Broad mission sensitivity • Transition will occur over 3 years, workload is constant
Case Study: Economics of Cloud Computing US Gov. • Economic analysis to investigate potential savings of the federal plan by focusing on a proprietary cost model of United States Government IT programs • Metrics used for Analysis: • Benefit-to-cost ratio’s (BCR) • Net present value (NPV) • Discounted payback period (DPP)
Case Study: Economics of Cloud Computing US Gov. Cont. • Benefit-to-cost ratio’s (BCR) • Calculated by each cloud scenario’s discounted net benefits less the cloud’s discounted one-time investment costs.(Absolute metric) • Greater then 1.0 indicates the economic benefit vs. the SQ (status quo environment) • Net present value (NPV) • calculated as each cloud scenario’s discounted net benefits divided by its discounted investment costs. (Relative economic metric) • Discounted payback period (DPP) • Reflects the number of years it takes for each scenario’s accumulated annual benefits to equal its total investment costs.
Economics of Cloud Computing • Net benefits and payback for agencies for hybrid is more similar to private cloud then public. • Based on the 75/25 percent previous assumption.
Sensitivity Analysis • Primary factors driving economic benefit: • Reduction in hardware • Length of cloud migration schedule • Public cloud benefit continues to increase BCR as servers migrated
Impact of Migration Schedule on Economics • Better to group smaller existing data centers into a larger cloud rather then several smaller clouds • As BCR decreases, DPP increases with transition time.
Take Home: Economics of Cloud Computing US Gov • Cloud computing offers potentially significant savings to federal agencies by reducing their expenditures • Benefits come with risks and practicalities to consider: • Will take 2-3 years for most agencies to transition • Once implemented, it could take as long as 4 years to reach enough savings to offset initial investments • Only an estimate, not based on a reliable estimate of government spending of an overall dollar figure
Question 1 • What are the types of service models for cloud computing • Software as a service • Platform as a service • Infrastructure as a service • All of the Above
Question 2 • Early adopters are more likely to be grouped into which deployment cloud type • Public • Hybrid • Private • Community
Question 3 • Which are benefits of transitioning to a cloud environment • Long term savings • Flexibility • Efficiency • All of the above