cloud computing for government b. victor chakravarty [email protected] october 6, 2009

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CLOUD COMPUTING FOR GOVERNMENT B. Victor Chakravarty [email protected] October 6, 2009

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Page 1: CLOUD COMPUTING FOR GOVERNMENT B. Victor Chakravarty Enterprise.Architect@Maine.Gov October 6, 2009

CLOUD COMPUTING FOR GOVERNMENT

B. Victor [email protected]

October 6, 2009

Page 2: CLOUD COMPUTING FOR GOVERNMENT B. Victor Chakravarty Enterprise.Architect@Maine.Gov October 6, 2009

October 6, 2009 GovTech Summit 2009 2

INTERNET AS CLOUD

• The Internet has been represented as a cloud right since it was conceived in the Sixties.

• “We always drew networks as amoeba-like things.” --Vint Cerf

• “As this Internet was being conceived, … some used cloudlike sketches to represent the Internet itself.” --Bob Taylor

Page 3: CLOUD COMPUTING FOR GOVERNMENT B. Victor Chakravarty Enterprise.Architect@Maine.Gov October 6, 2009

October 6, 2009 GovTech Summit 2009 3

CONSIDER• Schlage LiNK,

http://consumer.schlage.com/LiNK/product_tour/default.asp

• PRO: Flexibility. Scalability. No single point-of-failure. More professional? Cost?

• CON: Ownership? Subscription termination? Privacy? Bandwidth? Addressing? Exit strategy? Security? Malware for the deadbolt?

Page 4: CLOUD COMPUTING FOR GOVERNMENT B. Victor Chakravarty Enterprise.Architect@Maine.Gov October 6, 2009

October 6, 2009 GovTech Summit 2009 4

WHAT IS CLOUD COMPUTING?

Beyond the hype, some characteristics:• Commoditized service• Appears personalized or branded• Delivered via the Internet• Rented/leased (not owned)• Zero fixed cost• Per-unit pricing• Dynamically scalable & elastic

Page 5: CLOUD COMPUTING FOR GOVERNMENT B. Victor Chakravarty Enterprise.Architect@Maine.Gov October 6, 2009

October 6, 2009 GovTech Summit 2009 5

IS IT CLOUD COMPUTING?• Purchasing from Drugstore.com?• Using Hotmail?• On-premise application?• On-premise infrastructure?• Schlage LiNK?• Internet store that uses

Amazon as the backend?• Timeshare on a supercomputer?

Page 6: CLOUD COMPUTING FOR GOVERNMENT B. Victor Chakravarty Enterprise.Architect@Maine.Gov October 6, 2009

October 6, 2009 GovTech Summit 2009 6

A LOT TO THINK ABOUT• What is it that you do best? Why do

you want to keep the rest?• Capital expenditure vs. pay-go?• Legal residency requirements? PII?

Discovery turnaround time?• Owned property vs. rented/leased• KPI -> SLA• Service disruption• Client devices (here to stay)• Degree of customization

Page 7: CLOUD COMPUTING FOR GOVERNMENT B. Victor Chakravarty Enterprise.Architect@Maine.Gov October 6, 2009

October 6, 2009 GovTech Summit 2009 7

MORE TO THINK ABOUT

• Helpdesk• Interfaces• Pipe size• Traffic shape• Legacy data assets• Legacy software assets• Legacy hardware assets• Exit strategy• Internet outage

Page 8: CLOUD COMPUTING FOR GOVERNMENT B. Victor Chakravarty Enterprise.Architect@Maine.Gov October 6, 2009

October 6, 2009 GovTech Summit 2009 8

VARIOUS FLAVORS

• Vertical slicing: software, platform, infrastructure

• Horizontal slicing: private cloud, government cloud, public cloud

• Vendors position themselves opportunistically: http://blog.appirio.com/2009/03/cloud-computing-next-evolution-or.html.

Page 9: CLOUD COMPUTING FOR GOVERNMENT B. Victor Chakravarty Enterprise.Architect@Maine.Gov October 6, 2009

October 6, 2009 GovTech Summit 2009 9

IN-HOUSE I.T. STAFF• Focus shifts from keeping the

engine running to solving actual business problems.

• Focus shifts from administration to governance.

• Creates new opportunities to collaborate more directly with the business.

• Cloud or not, adaptability and willingness to acquire new skills remain the most prized assets.

Page 10: CLOUD COMPUTING FOR GOVERNMENT B. Victor Chakravarty Enterprise.Architect@Maine.Gov October 6, 2009

October 6, 2009 GovTech Summit 2009 10

COSTS• Short Term: Depending on the

complexity of the transition, costs may actually go UP.

• Medium Term: Beyond the transition, costs will likely go DOWN.

• Long Term: At current level of competition, costs will likely remain low. Excessive consolidation may change the competitive landscape and drive costs back UP.

Page 11: CLOUD COMPUTING FOR GOVERNMENT B. Victor Chakravarty Enterprise.Architect@Maine.Gov October 6, 2009

October 6, 2009 GovTech Summit 2009 11

DYNAMIC SIZING• Scalability: Seamless capacity

provisioning for variations in demand (spikes and dips)

• Elasticity: On-demand scale-up and scale-down in granular steps

• Operationalize capital expenditure via predictable, periodic outlays through an installment plan.

Page 12: CLOUD COMPUTING FOR GOVERNMENT B. Victor Chakravarty Enterprise.Architect@Maine.Gov October 6, 2009

October 6, 2009 GovTech Summit 2009 12

GARTNER ON CLOUD EMAIL

GARTNER LEADER’S TOOLKIT 23

23

Tens of Millions

Lights Out

$24/User/Year

DAS

$3.75/GB/Year

6GB

No

Thin

The Consumerized/Socialized Internet in the Game: Cloud E-Mail vs. On-Premises E-Mail, Circa 2012

On-Premises CloudScale

Ops Model

Cost

Storage Type

Storage Cost

Storage Amount

Tape Backup

Client

5,000 to 10,000

Higher-Touch

$120/User/Year

SAN & DAS

$25/GB/Year

500MB

Yes

Fat

Page 13: CLOUD COMPUTING FOR GOVERNMENT B. Victor Chakravarty Enterprise.Architect@Maine.Gov October 6, 2009

October 6, 2009 GovTech Summit 2009 13

GOVERNMENT IN THE CLOUD• Federal: USA.gov (claims 90%

infrastructure cost reduction); Apps.gov

• Maine: MaineCare claims payment; Campground reservation; Central voter registry? Financials? HR? Private cloud data center?

• North Carolina-Apple data center• Michigan public cloud• Google Government Cloud: FISMA and

SAS 70 compliant by 2010

Page 14: CLOUD COMPUTING FOR GOVERNMENT B. Victor Chakravarty Enterprise.Architect@Maine.Gov October 6, 2009

October 6, 2009 GovTech Summit 2009 14

SUMMARY: PLUSES• Cost containment, pay-go• No maintenance or upgrades• Focus on actual solutions• Scalability and elasticity• Rapid deployment• Greener (financial impact)• More robust: security, fault-

tolerance, backup, recovery, archiving, discovery, etc.

Page 15: CLOUD COMPUTING FOR GOVERNMENT B. Victor Chakravarty Enterprise.Architect@Maine.Gov October 6, 2009

October 6, 2009 GovTech Summit 2009 15

SUMMARY: MINUSES• Pipe constraints?• Rough transition: Data loss?

Service disruption?• Poor service? Inadequate contract?

Relationship management overhead?• Data residency? PII? Discovery?• Broken customization & interface?• Transition for in-house I.T. staff?• Difficulty in changing providers ->

Effective lock-in and monopoly?