Archive for December, 2009

Wishing You A Merry Christmas 2009!

Friday, December 25th, 2009

With this post I would like to wish you and your family a peaceful and happy Christmas holidays and an awesome, full of health and prosperity 2010!

ceo

On (Mobile) Cloud Computing – Multiple Angles to Benefits, Drivers and Economics

Friday, December 25th, 2009

Ajit wrote an interesting post titled Mobile Cloud Computing – the silver lining for Operators, where he explores Cloud Computing from an Operator perspective and discusses the synergies and opportunities for Carriers. He quotes an ABI Research report that states that cloud computing will become a “disruptive force in the mobile world: first is simply the number of users the technology has the power to reach: far more than the number of smartphone users alone. The second reason has to do with how applications are distributed today. Currently, mobile applications are tied to a carrier.”

Yes, cloud computing has in theory a great potential to reach great number of users because of the complex ecosystem that it involves – it is not only about end-users, but all the intermediaries as well, reaching all, working together.

The statement that mobile applications are tied to a carrier is a “yes and no” answer — if I’ve application A running on Android and iPhone, is that the same app ported to two platforms, or two different apps? There is no single answer as you may decide to track it as a single application on two platforms, or track each platform as its own application. And if I have a mobile web app, is that tied to a specified network provider? The answer is no.

One thing that caught my eye on Ajit’s essay was “the phrase ‘Mobile Cloud Computing’ itself has meaning only from an access standpoint. For instance, the ‘backup’ could work for any server (fixed or mobile).” But there are different views to (mobile) cloud computing in general and to better understand and rationalize (mobile) cloud computing in general — its benefits, drivers and economics, we must look at all its angles. Below I take a short stab at it, where we have:

  1. Applications vs. Services or the combination.
  2. The network of Constituents:
    • The PROVIDER of cloud computing infrastructure

      Provides hardware (HW) and software (SW) infrastructure, or applications and services, and/or all the above. Example are Amazon and Google and Rackspace, where latter is more on the HW side of the infrastructure while Amazon is both. Providers absorb most of the Capex behind powering (mobile) cloud computing.

      From the provider perspective it is about being competitive and win the business by offering pricing models that makes it attractive to their consumers. Attractive to customers is cheaper but reliable, and this is possible via hosted/SaaS/cloud-based approaches by deploying their own infrastructure or leveraging others.

    • The APPLICATION/SERVICES PROVIDER or (1st tier consumer) of cloud computing

      Are typically businesses consumers of cloud computing infrastructure and providers of applications and/or services. Examples like Google are both providers of cloud computing infrastructure and of applications and services. But the majority are providers of apps and services running on top of infrastructure provided by others (see PROVIDER above).

      From this tier-1 customer perspective is about minimizing IT Capex by moving such Capex costs to Opex. These customers look for pricing models based on number of seats and/or devices while minimizing their investment on expensive hardware and software and even IT operational investments; it helps them minimize risk ($) with respect to unknowns. They drive the Providers with requirements on scalability, high availability, multi-tenancy and security, to mention a few.

    • The DEVELOPER (2nd tier consumer) of cloud computing

      Are developers of applications and services. These applications are typically hosted on the cloud (see Provider above). Even client-based applications are increasingly consuming services on the cloud.Developers look to leverage the services which are hard to build but easier and cheaper to consume that gives them richness for their apps, with examples that include Maps and location, photos and storage. These developers offer their applications and services on the web via SaaS models running on other’s HW and SW infrastructure (see above).

    • The END-USER (3rd tier consumer) of cloud computing

      Are the typical end-users of applications. They don’t consumer services directly, but consume applications that in turn consume services on the cloud. These level of consumers really don’t care if the app is hosted or not. They only care that the app works WELL when needed with things such as security and high-availability and well usage experiences and etc, all being part of the package.

The following illustrates an example of this complex network of and between cloud computing participants:

Different constituents drive the requirements on different parts of cloud computing and in different ways. But at the end, cloud computing is mainly about economics and driven by providers and their Tier-1 customers, the application/services providers who in turn are driven by end-users and developers. At the end it is a network of application/services providers consuming other application/services providers via many infrastructure providers, and levels of providers and end-users and developers. SLAs are so important in this “new” world and Service Level Agreements (SLAs) are probably one of the most important aspects to make all this work; does SLA equal trust?

From the Mobile Network Operator (MNO) cloud-based / hosting is becoming increasingly important, especially when doing initial deployments of new technologies as it helps them minimize risk with respect to unknowns. From the developer’s perspective their dependencies on services on the web continues to increase (i.e. connected apps); even their local/native connected applications are big users of services on the web.

From the mobile perspective, consumption of centralized applications (mobile web) and services (both mobile web and local apps) will continue to be the trend i.e. consumption of software and services as a service on the web/cloud. The idea of mobile handsets as “servers” or provider of services is a very interesting one indeed, but we are not there yet and it will take longer to get there.

ceo

Awesome MobileMonday Austin Dec 2009 Event, thanks! | Next: January 20, 2010 with Android Dev Austin

Sunday, December 13th, 2009

We had a great MobileMonday Austin event on Dec 7, a full house and great speakers — what a great way to end 2009. Thanks to our sponsors and speakers:

David Gill (Nielsen), Austin Technology Incubator (Bart Bohn), Austin Entrepreneur Network (Hall Martin), Idea Finishing School (Dean McCall), Tech Ranch Austin (Jonas Lamis) and Erin Defosse, and startups Ringful, SocialMuse, MediaSourcery, AVAI Mobile, Edioma.

The 2010 calendar of events is being put together and is being published on an on-going basis — see http://www.mobilemondayaustin.org calendar of events.

NEXT EVENT

Our next event is with the new Android Dev Austin group, a new special interest group interested in Android OS and application software development, and put together in cooperation with the Austin chapter of MobileMonday. Our next event is as follows…

When: January 20, 2009, 6:00 – 8:00pm

Topic: Android Dev Austin

Agenda: In planning. If you are a developer or a startup of Android software and/or hardware and would like to present, please add your name to the registration page at http://groups.google.com/group/android-dev-austin/web/jan-2010-meeting or email me.

Where: Motive Building — http://www.motive.com

Cost: Free

To have an estimated headcount and for security (front-desk) please *add your name* to the following registration page: http://groups.google.com/group/android-dev-austin/web/jan-2010-meeting

Also, to keep track of Android Dev Austin-specific announcements, feel free to register at the Android Dev Austin mailing list at http://groups.google.com/group/android-dev-austin.

ceo

Reminder — MobileMonday Austin Event | next Monday Dec 7 ‘09 | Great Agenda!

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

MobileMonday Austin

A quick reminder of next MobileMonday Austin event, next Monday Dec 7 ‘09. We have a great agenda!

Hope to see you there!


When: December 7, 2009, 5:30 – 8:00pm

Topic: Central Texas Technology Incubators, Funding Sources and Mobile Apps Demo Night

Agenda:

Where: West Pickle Research Building, The Alamo room — see http://bit.ly/4Va4MW

Cost: Free. Pizza and sodas will be served.

Space is limited! To have an accurate headcount, please register by *adding your name* to the “December 7th Event page” at: http://groups.google.com/group/momoaustin/web/mobilemonday-austin-event-december-7-2009

If you are a startup or developer who would like to demo your applications, please send me an email to enrique dot ortiz at gmail dot com.

Thanks to our sponsor, the Austin Wireless Alliance! And to our Speakers!!!

ceo (@eortiz, @momoaustin)