The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20180108064842/http://eclipse.sys-con.com:80/node/3926330

Welcome!

Eclipse Authors: Pat Romanski, Elizabeth White, Liz McMillan, David H Deans, JP Morgenthal

Related Topics: FinTech Journal, Java IoT, Linux Containers, Eclipse, Server Monitoring, @CloudExpo, @DevOpsSummit

FinTech Journal: Article

Cloud Operating Model | @CloudExpo @JPMorgenthal #IoT #PaaS #AWS #Azure #OpenShift

When was the last time you’ve ever heard anyone say “IT Applications & Operations”?

Hard Choices Are Required When Adopting a Cloud Operating Model

When was the last time you’ve ever heard anyone say “IT Applications & Operations”? Frankly, in my 30+ year career in IT, I don’t believe I’ve ever heard anyone use this term. The typical term we hear is IT Infrastructure & Operations. These two go together like Peanut Butter and Jelly, which tells us a lot about how we view the field of IT.

For those that may not be familiar with the role of IT Operations, Joe Hertvik does a great job here of describing IT Operations Management as someone engaged in the role of providing this service to the business. As you can see it’s very interesting how he specifically addresses the gap between responsibilities regarding IT Applications and IT Operations as a Venn diagram in which there is no overlap.

However, as we progress from a pre-Cloud Operating Model world to a post-Cloud Operating Model world, this coupling is changing. As we migrate workloads to the cloud, the first shift will be to operating infrastructure to operating Infrastructure-as-a-Service. This shift will leverage capacity management and monitoring skills used with virtualized environments.

The second shift will come as migrated workloads are refactored into cloud native applications or new cloud native applications are developed specifically for cloud. Here the emphasis of operations will focus on the management and monitoring of the application platform. This may be done using a Platform-as-a-Service offering, such as Azure PaaS, AWS, Cloud Foundry or OpenShift, Software-as-a-Service platforms, such as Salesforce.com or ServiceNow, or even something more traditional based on traditional application servers.

During this second shift, operations will need to focus less on availability and more on consumption patterns. Given the nature of cloud native applications to support greater availability and resilience (see Pets & Cattle presentation by Randy Bias ) through design, emphasis will need to shift toward how services are being consumed in order to determine efficiency and costs management. Greater integration between the operations management platforms and the cloud services will be a critical requirement for this shift to occur.

The final shift will happen as businesses move toward Serverless Computing or Function-as-a-Service. In this model, business logic will execute in response to an event occurring in another service. Due to the temporal nature of this model, operations management and monitoring will change drastically. The application will only be available to monitor for brief periods requiring new techniques for operations in support of the Serverless Computing model. Failures that occur here may only be recognizable by performing analytics on post-execution logs.

The Impact of the Cloud Operating Model Shift
Having presented a view of the world post-Cloud Operating Model, you may ask what’s the impact of this roadmap on today’s traditional IT environment?

As operations is designed today they focus on running the physical and logical environments, which means a significant number of resources are focused on running the devices that run the network, compute and storage in addition to specialized software for monitoring and managing the various components. It also means that the overall budget has had to be divided across managing the physical environment and the applications, with the physical environment usually taking the lion’s share of the budget. This is just the nature of the beast as production applications tend to demonstrate a lower mean-time-to-failure and require less attention than its physical counterparts. Moreover, the physical environment is constrained by procurement cycles and capital expenditure approvals that is not characteristic of the applications.

As shown in the diagram above, as businesses move to away from self-managed infrastructure — it’s not just to cloud, but all infrastructure provided as-a-Service — the focus of IT operations will shift more of its focus to the workloads and the applications. Simultaneously, operational focus shifts away from running a physical environment as this task falls to the infrastructure providers. Hence, what we should expect to see going forward is operations being “unbound” from infrastructure and bonded with applications. As more and more businesses realize the economic benefits of relinquishing ownership of their infrastructure to a provider, IT should reorganize around operations of the applications and workloads.

This unbinding and re-binding process for operations is a key element for successfully implementing a cloud operating model. The results of this activity is that the remaining self-managed infrastructure organization needs to become more encapsulated. It will need fewer resources and should consider combining operational support with infrastructure engineering. This should result in lower operational overhead and significant reduction in IT costs.

This change will also raise every red flag you can imagine for those that have been in infrastructure and operations for the better part of their careers. The fiefdom holders, the server huggers, the CCIEs, vExperts, the tinkerers, the storage priests, etc. will demonstrate strong resistance to this change.  They will introduce fear, uncertainty and doubt whenever possible. They will regale stories of cloud failures and breaches. All of this is an attempt to maintain the status quo for as long as possible in light of this disruptive force. It is here that executives must weigh the pros and cons of this change and be the driving force behind moving to this new IT organizational construct.

Additionally, what we’ve seen in many early adopters of cloud, however, is the applications move without its operations counterpart. Eventually, someone asks the question, “where’s my dashboard?” or “how is this integrated into our ITIL processes?” Thus, as we unbind operations from infrastructure and bind it with applications, what is being monitored and how its managed changes, but we carry across, and, hopefully, correct high-latency low-value, processes to support audit, transparency, and corrective action. Some existing operations skills will transfer to this new focus, however, there will be a change in the tooling used for these tasks and, likewise, different skills will be required to operate cloud-based and hybrid applications.

The biggest issue for business will be how to adopt and implement operational management as their workloads shift away from infrastructure and toward applications. There is some early guidance from the application performance management vendors, such as Dynatrace and AppDynamics, and examples from Webscale startups, but as whole, this segment of the industry is unwritten.

We know that key performance indicators that are important today will be different in this post-Cloud Operating Model world. Also, it is very likely that the tools needed to monitor and manage applications in this post-Cloud Operating Model world do not exist or are only starting to now appear in the market. Hence, skilled individuals that understand how to configure these tools most likely don’t yet exist. Thus, the likely outcome will be that businesses will attempt to manage the post-Cloud Operating Model world with the same knowledge and tools they use to manage the pre-Cloud Operating Model world, which will, unfortunately, fail. It is in this failure that I believe the leaders of how to operate a post-Cloud Operating Model world will emerge.

Special thanks to @cpswan and @glenprobinson for their assistance in helping me shape my ideas for this blog

More Stories By JP Morgenthal

JP Morgenthal is a veteran IT solutions executive and Distinguished Engineer with CSC. He has been delivering IT services to business leaders for the past 30 years and is a recognized thought-leader in applying emerging technology for business growth and innovation. JP's strengths center around transformation and modernization leveraging next generation platforms and technologies. He has held technical executive roles in multiple businesses including: CTO, Chief Architect and Founder/CEO. Areas of expertise for JP include strategy, architecture, application development, infrastructure and operations, cloud computing, DevOps, and integration. JP is a published author with four trade publications with his most recent being “Cloud Computing: Assessing the Risks”. JP holds both a Masters and Bachelors of Science in Computer Science from Hofstra University.

@ThingsExpo Stories
"Space Monkey by Vivent Smart Home is a product that is a distributed cloud-based edge storage network. Vivent Smart Home, our parent company, is a smart home provider that places a lot of hard drives across homes in North America," explained JT Olds, Director of Engineering, and Brandon Crowfeather, Product Manager, at Vivint Smart Home, in this SYS-CON.tv interview at @ThingsExpo, held Oct 31 – Nov 2, 2017, at the Santa Clara Convention Center in Santa Clara, CA.
SYS-CON Events announced today that Conference Guru has been named “Media Sponsor” of the 22nd International Cloud Expo, which will take place on June 5-7, 2018, at the Javits Center in New York, NY. A valuable conference experience generates new contacts, sales leads, potential strategic partners and potential investors; helps gather competitive intelligence and even provides inspiration for new products and services. Conference Guru works with conference organizers to pass great deals to gre...
The Internet of Things will challenge the status quo of how IT and development organizations operate. Or will it? Certainly the fog layer of IoT requires special insights about data ontology, security and transactional integrity. But the developmental challenges are the same: People, Process and Platform. In his session at @ThingsExpo, Craig Sproule, CEO of Metavine, demonstrated how to move beyond today's coding paradigm and shared the must-have mindsets for removing complexity from the develop...
In his Opening Keynote at 21st Cloud Expo, John Considine, General Manager of IBM Cloud Infrastructure, led attendees through the exciting evolution of the cloud. He looked at this major disruption from the perspective of technology, business models, and what this means for enterprises of all sizes. John Considine is General Manager of Cloud Infrastructure Services at IBM. In that role he is responsible for leading IBM’s public cloud infrastructure including strategy, development, and offering m...
"Evatronix provides design services to companies that need to integrate the IoT technology in their products but they don't necessarily have the expertise, knowledge and design team to do so," explained Adam Morawiec, VP of Business Development at Evatronix, in this SYS-CON.tv interview at @ThingsExpo, held Oct 31 – Nov 2, 2017, at the Santa Clara Convention Center in Santa Clara, CA.
To get the most out of their data, successful companies are not focusing on queries and data lakes, they are actively integrating analytics into their operations with a data-first application development approach. Real-time adjustments to improve revenues, reduce costs, or mitigate risk rely on applications that minimize latency on a variety of data sources. In his session at @BigDataExpo, Jack Norris, Senior Vice President, Data and Applications at MapR Technologies, reviewed best practices to ...
Widespread fragmentation is stalling the growth of the IIoT and making it difficult for partners to work together. The number of software platforms, apps, hardware and connectivity standards is creating paralysis among businesses that are afraid of being locked into a solution. EdgeX Foundry is unifying the community around a common IoT edge framework and an ecosystem of interoperable components.
Large industrial manufacturing organizations are adopting the agile principles of cloud software companies. The industrial manufacturing development process has not scaled over time. Now that design CAD teams are geographically distributed, centralizing their work is key. With large multi-gigabyte projects, outdated tools have stifled industrial team agility, time-to-market milestones, and impacted P&L; stakeholders.
"Akvelon is a software development company and we also provide consultancy services to folks who are looking to scale or accelerate their engineering roadmaps," explained Jeremiah Mothersell, Marketing Manager at Akvelon, in this SYS-CON.tv interview at 21st Cloud Expo, held Oct 31 – Nov 2, 2017, at the Santa Clara Convention Center in Santa Clara, CA.
"IBM is really all in on blockchain. We take a look at sort of the history of blockchain ledger technologies. It started out with bitcoin, Ethereum, and IBM evaluated these particular blockchain technologies and found they were anonymous and permissionless and that many companies were looking for permissioned blockchain," stated René Bostic, Technical VP of the IBM Cloud Unit in North America, in this SYS-CON.tv interview at 21st Cloud Expo, held Oct 31 – Nov 2, 2017, at the Santa Clara Conventi...
In his session at 21st Cloud Expo, Carl J. Levine, Senior Technical Evangelist for NS1, will objectively discuss how DNS is used to solve Digital Transformation challenges in large SaaS applications, CDNs, AdTech platforms, and other demanding use cases. Carl J. Levine is the Senior Technical Evangelist for NS1. A veteran of the Internet Infrastructure space, he has over a decade of experience with startups, networking protocols and Internet infrastructure, combined with the unique ability to it...
22nd International Cloud Expo, taking place June 5-7, 2018, at the Javits Center in New York City, NY, and co-located with the 1st DXWorld Expo will feature technical sessions from a rock star conference faculty and the leading industry players in the world. Cloud computing is now being embraced by a majority of enterprises of all sizes. Yesterday's debate about public vs. private has transformed into the reality of hybrid cloud: a recent survey shows that 74% of enterprises have a hybrid cloud ...
"Cloud Academy is an enterprise training platform for the cloud, specifically public clouds. We offer guided learning experiences on AWS, Azure, Google Cloud and all the surrounding methodologies and technologies that you need to know and your teams need to know in order to leverage the full benefits of the cloud," explained Alex Brower, VP of Marketing at Cloud Academy, in this SYS-CON.tv interview at 21st Cloud Expo, held Oct 31 – Nov 2, 2017, at the Santa Clara Convention Center in Santa Clar...
Gemini is Yahoo’s native and search advertising platform. To ensure the quality of a complex distributed system that spans multiple products and components and across various desktop websites and mobile app and web experiences – both Yahoo owned and operated and third-party syndication (supply), with complex interaction with more than a billion users and numerous advertisers globally (demand) – it becomes imperative to automate a set of end-to-end tests 24x7 to detect bugs and regression. In th...
"MobiDev is a software development company and we do complex, custom software development for everybody from entrepreneurs to large enterprises," explained Alan Winters, U.S. Head of Business Development at MobiDev, in this SYS-CON.tv interview at 21st Cloud Expo, held Oct 31 – Nov 2, 2017, at the Santa Clara Convention Center in Santa Clara, CA.
Coca-Cola’s Google powered digital signage system lays the groundwork for a more valuable connection between Coke and its customers. Digital signs pair software with high-resolution displays so that a message can be changed instantly based on what the operator wants to communicate or sell. In their Day 3 Keynote at 21st Cloud Expo, Greg Chambers, Global Group Director, Digital Innovation, Coca-Cola, and Vidya Nagarajan, a Senior Product Manager at Google, discussed how from store operations and ...
"There's plenty of bandwidth out there but it's never in the right place. So what Cedexis does is uses data to work out the best pathways to get data from the origin to the person who wants to get it," explained Simon Jones, Evangelist and Head of Marketing at Cedexis, in this SYS-CON.tv interview at 21st Cloud Expo, held Oct 31 – Nov 2, 2017, at the Santa Clara Convention Center in Santa Clara, CA.
SYS-CON Events announced today that CrowdReviews.com has been named “Media Sponsor” of SYS-CON's 22nd International Cloud Expo, which will take place on June 5–7, 2018, at the Javits Center in New York City, NY. CrowdReviews.com is a transparent online platform for determining which products and services are the best based on the opinion of the crowd. The crowd consists of Internet users that have experienced products and services first-hand and have an interest in letting other potential buye...
SYS-CON Events announced today that Telecom Reseller has been named “Media Sponsor” of SYS-CON's 22nd International Cloud Expo, which will take place on June 5-7, 2018, at the Javits Center in New York, NY. Telecom Reseller reports on Unified Communications, UCaaS, BPaaS for enterprise and SMBs. They report extensively on both customer premises based solutions such as IP-PBX as well as cloud based and hosted platforms.
It is of utmost importance for the future success of WebRTC to ensure that interoperability is operational between web browsers and any WebRTC-compliant client. To be guaranteed as operational and effective, interoperability must be tested extensively by establishing WebRTC data and media connections between different web browsers running on different devices and operating systems. In his session at WebRTC Summit at @ThingsExpo, Dr. Alex Gouaillard, CEO and Founder of CoSMo Software, presented ...