Content area

Abstract

Utility computing - hailed as the biggest paradigm shift since the first disk drive spun up -- has stalled. One basic definition defines utility as an on-demand computing resource. On-demand computing allows companies to outsource significant portions of their datacenters, and even ratchet resource requirements up and down quickly and easily depending on need. The on-demand version of utility computing is the one closest to fruition. This year, Sun Microsystems has been the noisiest of the bunch, recently announcing that it wants to be the electric company of offsite computing cycles. The grand concept of utility computing is a solution for three key problems: 1. wasteful technology purchases, 2. unnecessarily laborious IT processes, and 3. rigid IT capabilities that by definition paralyze business processes. Grids provide a perfect entry into the utility-computing space because they follow the golden rule of offering more for less: namely, the power of a supercomputer for the price of a few workstations.

Details

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Title
Utility Computing: A Dream Deferred
Publication title
InfoWorld; San Mateo
Volume
27
Issue
21
Pages
44-49
Number of pages
6
Publication year
2005
Publication date
May 23, 2005
Publisher
Foundry
Place of publication
San Mateo
Country of publication
United States
ISSN
01996649
CODEN
INWODU
Source type
Trade Journal
Language of publication
English
Document type
Cover Story
Document feature
Photographs; Illustrations
ProQuest document ID
194371949
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/trade-journals/utility-computing-dream-deferred/docview/194371949/se-2?accountid=208611
Copyright
Copyright Infoworld Media Group May 23, 2005
Last updated
2024-11-19
Database
ProQuest One Academic