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Rick Fleming HP Federal Practice Lead February 2009

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Presentation on theme: "Rick Fleming HP Federal Practice Lead February 2009"— Presentation transcript:

1 Rick Fleming HP Federal Practice Lead February 2009
Cloud Concepts To request an accessible version of this presentation please Rick Fleming HP Federal Practice Lead February 2009

2 information & e-commerce
The Third Generation reach The Cloud The Web virtualized services information & e-commerce The Internet “A pool of abstracted, highly scalable, and managed infrastructure capable of hosting end-customer applications and billed by consumption,” Forrester connectivity time 1970 1980 1990 2000 2005 2010 2020 2

3 “Everything as a Service” Delivered by the Cloud
June 25, 2007 “Everything as a Service” Delivered by the Cloud Business Apps Media sharing Backup Management Apps Search Mobile Services Productivity Apps Location-Based Services Social Networking Storage on Demand Platform on Demand Infrastructure on Demand Cloud Computing Means Many Different Things To Different People 3 3

4 What do we mean by cloud? What’s new? Service providers Service users
The cloud is a means by which global class, highly scalable and flexible services can be delivered and consumed over the internet through an as-needed, pay-per-use business model. What’s new? New access: everything is a service New capabilities: multi-tenant software New connections: information in context

5 Technology over the internet
The cloud (r)evolution: solving problems that current technology models can’t solve Service providers Service users Services and data break apart New connections Information relevance Multi-tenant applications New capabilities Flexible consumption New access EaaS Existing apps and infrastructure Contract-based consumption Technology over the internet 15-Dec-17

6 Massive Scale-out and the Cloud
Enterprise Class Global class On-premise Hybrid/off-premise 100s -1000s of nodes 10,000+ nodes Proprietary Commodity HW resiliency SW resiliency Max performance Max efficiency Silo’ed Resources Shared Resources Cost-Center Clusters Grids/Cloud Value/ Revenue-Center Static Elastic Shared storage Replicated storage Facility costs Power Usage Efficiency 6 17 Decmeber 2008

7 Business Technology Optimization
Adaptive Infrastructure and Business Technology Optimization enable an automated service environment Business outcome Business outcomes Technology-enabled services Business Technology Optimization Externally hosted Enterprise-class applications Global-class cloud services Infrastructure as a service Internally hosted Adaptive Infrastructure Pooled resources -- shared infrastructure Adaptive Infrastructure Pooled resources -- shared infrastructure Infrastructure Utility heterogeneous, distributed design Infrastructure Utility homogeneous, centralized design

8 Cloud Computing Defined
What is the Cloud? Applications are increasingly “click to run” services that live in remote Internet data centers – not on the PC or local server. They scale to millions and use shared IT infrastructure. Not all applications will move to the cloud. However, we believe that on the margin, new applications, usage and customers are moving to the cloud. This is a disruptive change, impacting the user experience, the economics of the IT industry, product design, how companies go to market, and value capture for developers, distributors & partners. Cloud Applications On-Demand Applications MIDDLEWARE DATABASE PLATFORMS Cloud Infrastructure COMPUTING STORAGE NETWORK

9 Secure Cloud Computing Model Cloud Computing Vision
Cloud Services Cloud Management SLA & SYSTEM REPORTING PROXY/GATEWAYS COLLABORATION TEST MANAGEMENT PORTAL WEB SERVER &PORTAL SVCS DIRECTORY SERVICES CROSS DOMAIN SERVICES TEST DATA ACCESS CLOUD ORCHESTRATION & ACCOUNTING BUDGETING & FINANCIAL TOOLS APP DEPLOYMENT SERVICES NETWORK SIMULATION LIVE DATA STREAMS BUSINESS SERVICE MGMT SECURITY EVALUATION SVCS VERSION CONTROL SERVICES RELEASE AND FAILBACK SERVICES USER CONTROLLED BACKUP/ARCHIVE IT SERVICE MGMT SECURITY MGMT Cloud Infrastructure MIDDLEWARE IT OPERATIONS DATABASE PROVISIONING PLATFORMS PROCESSING BACKUP/ARCHIVE STORAGE CONFIGURATION MGMT NETWORK

10 Secure Cloud Computing
June 25, 2007 Benefits of Secure Cloud Computing Stakeholder Views and Solution Aspects Stakeholder Secure Cloud Computing Benefits Business Reduce Acquisition Cycle Pay based on Use Dashboard View of IT Reduce TCO Increase Service Levels Improve Customer Support IT Instant, Reliable Deployment Control tower automation Standard, Secure Platforms Reduce Manpower Increase Manageability Minimize Security Risks Developers On-line Self Service Portal Rapid Access to Services Value Added Capabilities Cut Development Cycle Ensure Interoperability Speed C&A Process Users ‘Unlimited’ Capacity Assured Service Delivery Flexible and Reconfigurable Increase Productivity IT Capability keeps pace with Business need Benefits of Cloud Computing Span the Organization 10

11 Infrastructure delivery options:
On premises Off premises Mission critical Predictable demand High security Legacy / heterogeneous High internal staffing Mission critical Predictable demand High security Reduced cap ex Reduced internal staffing Dedicated W W W W W W Non-critical Variable demand High security and performance transparency Some standardization Non-critical Variable demand Lower security and performance transparency Highly standardized W W W W Shared W W W W

12 The Dynamic Development Environment (DDE)
DDE Overview. The Dynamic Development Environment (DDE) is a free foundation service for HP-IT teams that provides multiple development environments on demand leveraging existing HP services and standards. Our model is fully-automated self-service environment. A standardized development environment. A dynamic resource. A means to reduce hardware hoarded “just in case”. For development, debug, and unit test. Built on dependable servers and SAN. DDE Benefits Reduces number of physical servers required. Reduces the number of operating system instances. Quicker turn around time when provisioning aserver. Saving of server configurations for an application environment.

13 OpenCirrus cloud computing research testbed http://www. cloudtestbed
An open, internet-scale global testbed for cloud computing research a tool for collaborative research focus: data center management & cloud services Resources: Multi-continent, multi-datacenter, cloud computing system “Centers of Excellence” around the globe each with 100–400+ nodes and up to ~2PB storage and running a suite of cloud services Structure: a loose federation Sponsors: HP Labs, Intel Research, Yahoo! Initial Partners: UIUC, Singapore IDA, KIT, NSF 13 December 15, 2017December 15, 2017 © Hewlett-Packard Company ICAC © Hewlett-Packard Company 13


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