Cloud computing

Crashing Hard Drives & the Goodness of the Cloud

How’s this for having a bad week: First, the spinning beachball of death starts to get even worse on my MacBook Pro. Then, I boot up my relatively new iMac, and rather than a beautiful blue screen, I get the white screen of death with a file folder blinking back at me, which is never a good sign.

First reaction: “Crap”.

Second reaction: “I hope my AppleCare hasn’t expired”.

Third reaction: “Great, another trip to Carbon Computing”.

If there is a silver lining to a double shot of computer woes, it is that an increasing amount of my computing has migrated to the cloud. I’m a big user of Google Docs to handle word documents and spreadsheets. I made the move to Google Apps and GMail a few months ago. And DropBox has become a “virtual” harddrive/storage depot for lots of personal and professional documents.

It means that having hard drives go crash and burn isn’t a catastrophe as much as an aggravation. When I was told the hard drive on the MacBook Pro would likely have to be replaced, I just cut and paste a bunch of data into DropBox, which was a snap because I happily pay $99/year for 50GB of storage.

Putting your computing world into the cloud can be a leap of faith but it’s a no-brainer for people like myself who are mobile and use different devices to access data and services. At the end of the day, hard drive problems are still a pain in the rear end but rather than being a disaster, they’re bumps in the road.

And, of course, I had everything backed up on an external hard drive just in case because it’s always good to have a backup plan!

The Dangers of Loving Google Too Much

With the launch of Google+, there’s yet another reason for people to embed themselves even deeper within the Google empire.

The availability of free services that work well have been an irresistible and subtle attraction and, arguably, seduction for many people. Without fully realizing it, you can find yourself depending on a variety of Google services for your personal and professional lives.

For example, my Google portfolio includes Google+ (although I’m a less than enthusiastic embrace), Google Docs, GMail and Google Apps. Then, there’s my regular use of search, Google Maps and Google Images. I would suspect my embrace would be fairly typical of many people who use the Web on a regular basis.

But there is a price to be paid and danger for dancing with Google.

First, the service may cost nothing but they’re not free; there is a price to be paid. For one, Google has access to a good chunk of your activity, which not only feeds its ability to deliver increasingly relevant advertising but information about your online behaviour.

Second, Google has the ability to lock you out of your services without providing an explanation or justification for “violating” its terms of service. For anyone who has seen their online lives disappear behind the dark Google curtain of death, you know how terrifying it can be.

Sure, it’s a remote prospect but, nevertheless, people need to be aware it is part of the deal they strike with Google to gain access to “free” services. You same “deal with the Devil” applies to Facebook and Twitter.

So what can you do to protect yourself from being too dependent on Google or having Google slam the door on your nose?

Well, you could stick to non-online services such as Outlook and Microsoft Office but that would meaning not being able to take advantage of the cloud. For lots of people that would be fine but for people who travel or work away from the office on a regular basis, the cloud offers the convenience of access any time, anywhere.

Another approach is spreading your online portfolio between different service providers. Perhaps you use GMail for e-mail, Microsoft Live or Zoho for productivity services, and DropBox for collaboration and storage. While it reduces risk, it’s probably not the best or most user-friendly approach given there’s no integration between the different services.

In many cases, it means dancing with Google, and accepting the fact there are potential risks or downsides. Given the depth of the Google portfolio, it is a deal most people are willing to make.

Is the Desktop Really Dying?

Everything is going into the cloud. Or is it?

If you listen to Google, the Web browser is becoming everything when it comes to how people use their computers. With the Chrome OS hitting the market soon, Google is ramping up its efforts to convince consumers that the need for desktop applications is disappearing because anything you want to do with a computer can happen online. This quote from Linus Upson, Google’s v.p. of engineering, makes this belief clear as a bell:

“Everything’s happening on the Web. All of the companies and all of the services that people are using — Facebook, Twitter, Amazon, eBay — all of the applications and services that people are using are Web-based. The desktop ecosystem has basically stopped.”

If you’re Google, this is a no-brainer approach given the major growth of the Chrome browser and Google’s the number of online services such as Google Docs, Picasa, Google Calendar and GMail. In the Google world, there are fewer reasons to use desktop applications and, of course, reduced need for Microsoft’s operating system.

The question is whether the desktop is actually dying amid the tsumani of cloud computing. As more applications going to be online will there be little use for desktop applications, or has the enthusiasm about cloud computing become over-heated and frothy?

There is little doubt that cloud computing is becoming more common but I don’t think it means desktop applications are going to disappear.

There may, in fact, be some users who can and will rely exclusively on online services but, at the same time, there will be many people who will continue to rely on using software that is off the grid. Yes, Virginia, there are people who aren’t online all the time and/or don’t want to use an application that stores all their data in the cloud.

Personally, I continue to use desktop applications. This includes Microsoft Office, Tweetdeck, DayLite, iTunes and 1Password. At the same time, I’m an enthusiastic user of Google Docs, GMail, Dropbox and WordPress.

What it means is I marry the best of what both worlds – the cloud and the desktop – have to offer. For some activities such as working with clients, cloud computing makes a lot of sense. For other activities, a desktop application works really well. It’s just a matter of picking the right application for the right job.

Are you still using desktop applications? Could use see giving them up completely?

Cloud Computing: The Best Thing Since Sliced Bread?

We’re in the midst of a revolution or maybe an evolution when it comes to how we use software.

Everything is going to be browser-based. The new OS is the Web browser. The cloud is the computer.

But is it really?

As much as I’m a Web 2.0 junkie (beta, anyone?), I’m also using a lot of software programs to work and play. The list includes:

- Microsoft Office
- Blogo and Ecto (blog publishing tools)
- TweetDeck and Seesmic Desktop (Twitter)
- iTunes
- Apple Mail
- iCal
- Skype

And on my iPhone, I’ve happily downloaded a bunch of applications that have nothing to do with the Web browser.

So, the question is: are we over-hyping cloud computing? Are we putting too much faith in the cloud? Are we overly confident the services and data we have “out there” will be available any time and all the time?

I think the answer is “Yes”. There is no doubt cloud computing is going to dramatically change how we use applications and data. It is going to evolutionize the computing industry and how we interact with computers.

But it’s also important not to let the pendulum swing too far to one extreme. Right now, cloud computing is far from perfect, which means there is a role for offline software to happily co-exist.

For some interesting perspectives on cloud computing, check out a recent blog post by Robert Scoble, which he did after Twitter was crippled recently by a hacker attack. Scoble talks about how putting your data in someone else’s hands is a “pretty significant risk”, citing his experience with Flickr, which locked him out because his pro account had lapsed.

Another take – albeit characteristically flamboyant – comes from Oracle CEO Larry Ellison, who riffs about how cloud computing is completely over-blown.

In looking at the hype surrounding cloud computing, Ellison opines that the “computer industry the only industry more fashion driven than the fashion industry”.

So, what do you think? Is cloud computing living up to the hype or over-blown?


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