[..] Cloudave – When cloud form in US, it rains in Ethiopia [..]
FullArmor's Kim estimates building a network for thousands of teacherswould have cost hundreds of dollars per teacher, compared with a fewdollars per month via the cloud.The second advantage is the faster time to market. In projects like these, time is a crucial factor and the Cloud beats everything else by a wide margin on this front.
The feeling is pretty well summed up by this quote by the GM of Azure.A data center — the central element of cloudcomputing — would have taken months to build and required downtime toexpand as each new batch of teachers joined the network.
By building in the Microsoft cloud, using data centers around theworld that the company runs, Kim said FullArmor, working with partnerSQLSoft, launched the project in weeks and can scale quickly from apilot to tens of thousands of laptops by the end of the year.
"It extends reach of technology into the community that can takehuge benefit from these services and yet may have not had access to itin the short term because of infrastructure requirements," said DougHauger, general manager of Windows Azure at Microsoft.
What's happening in Ethiopia captures the possibilities of the cloud,he said — "the agility, decreasing time to market, keeping it out ofyour own data center and allowing you to reach a broad audienceregardless of where they are in the world."This is the point we, the cloud evangelists, take pains to highlight in our posts and discussions. Whether it is an enterprise in USA trying to take a product fast into the market (pharma companies comes to my mind while talking about the need for speed) or a small business wanting to scale to cope with the sudden demand for their product/service or a non profit trying to change the lives of people in war torn parts of Africa, Cloud Computing can make a huge difference. It is time for everyone to understand the value created by this paradigm shift in computing and adapt it in their workflow.
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