Cloud conversations: Public, Private, Hybrid and Community Clouds? (Part II)

Cloud conversations: Public, Private, Hybrid and Community Clouds? (Part II)

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This is the second of a two part series, read part I here.

Common  community cloud conversation questions include among others:

Who  defines the standards for community clouds?

The  members or participants, or whoever they hire or get to volunteer to do it.

Who  pays for the community cloud?

The  members or participants do, think about a co-op or other resource sharing  consortium with multi-tenant (shared) capabilities to isolate and keep members  along with what they are doing separate.

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Who  are community clouds for, when to use them?

If  you cannot justify a private cloud for yourself, or, if you need more  resiliency than what can be provided by your site and you know of a peer,  partner, member or other with common needs, those could be a fit. Another  variation is you are in an industry or agency or district where pooling of  resources, yet operating separate has advantages or already being done. These  range from medical and healthcare to education along with various small medium businesses  (SMBs) that do not want to or cannot use a public facility for various reasons.

What  technology is needed for building a  community cloud?

Similar  to deploying a public or private cloud, you will need various hard products  including servers, storage, networking, management software tools for provisioning,  orchestration, show back or charge back, multi-tenancy, security and authentication,  data protection (backup, bc, dr, ha) along with various middleware and  applications.

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What  are community clouds used for?

Almost  anything, granted there are limits and boundaries based tools, technologies,  security and access controls among other constraints. Applications can range  from big-data to little-data on  all if not most points in between. On the other hand, if they are not safe or  secure enough for your needs, then use a private cloud or whatever it is that you are currently using.

What  about community cloud security, privacy and compliance regulations?

Those  are topics and reasons why like-minded or affected groups might be able to  leverage a community cloud. By being like-minded or affected groups, labs,  schools, business, entities, agencies, districts, or other organizations that  are under common mandates for security, compliance, privacy or other regulations  can work together, yet keep their interests separate. What tools or techniques  for achieving those goals and objectives would be dependent on those who  offer services to those entities now?

  

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Where  can you get a community cloud?

Look  around using Google or your favorite search tool; also watch the comments section to see how long it  takes someone to jump in to say how he or she can help. Also talk with solution  providers, business partners and VARs. Note that they may not know the term or phrases  per say, so here is what to tell them. Tell them that you would like to deploy  a private cloud at some place that will then be used in a multi-tenant way  to safely and securely support different members of your consortium.

For  those who have been around long enough, you can also just tell them that you  want to do something like the co-op or consortium time-sharing type  systems from past generations and they may know what you are looking for. If although they look at you with a blank deer in the head-light stare eyes  glazed over, just tell them it’s a new lead-edge, software defined new and revolutionary  (add some superlatives if you feel inclined) and then they might get excited.  If they still don’t know what to do or help  you with, have them get in touch with me and I will explain it to them, or, I’ll  put you in touch with those can help.

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Where  do you put a community cloud?

You  could deploy them in your own facility, other member’s locations or both for resiliency.  You could also use a safe secure co-lo facility already being used for other  purposes.

Do  community clouds have organizers?

Perhaps,  however they are probably more along the lines of a coordinator, administrator,  manager, controller as opposed to a community organizer per say. In other words,  do not confuse a community cloud with a cloud community organized, aligned and  activated for some particular cause. On  the other hand, maybe there is value prop for some cloud activist to be  organized and take up the cause for community clouds in your area of interest  ;).

data centers, information factories and clouds

Are  community clouds more of a concept vs. a product?

If  you have figured out that a community or peer cloud is nothing more than a  different way of deploying, using and managing a combination of private, public  and hybrid and putting a marketing name on them, congratulations, you are now  thinking outside of the box, or outside of the usual cloud conversations.

What  about public cloud services for selected audiences such as Amazons GovCloud? On one hand, I  guess you could call or think of that as a semi-private public cloud, or a  semi-public private cloud, or if you like superlatives an uber gallistic  hybrid  community cloud.

How you go about building, deploying and managing your community, coop, consortium, and agency, district or peer cloud will be how you leverage various hard and software products. The results of which will be your return on innovation (the new ROI) to address various needs and concerns or also known as valueware. Those results should be able to address or help close gaps and leverage clouds in general as a resource vs. simply as a tool, technology or technique.

Ok, nuff said...

Cheers gs

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