Category Archives: Layer 7 Technologies

NIST Perspective on Cloud Computing

Earlier this month, NIST went public with their perspective on cloud computing. This is important because NIST is a well-respected, public standards organization, and there is still a lot of confusion about what cloud really is (the *-aaS affect).

They released only  a short, two page document and a longer, 72 slide PowerPoint (you can find their main page here). They are offering a broad definition based on essential characteristics, delivery models, and deployment models:

Essential Characteristics:

On-demand self-service

Ubiquitous network access

Location independent resource pooling

Rapid elasticity

Measured Service

Delivery Models:

Cloud Software as a Service (SaaS)

Cloud Platform as a Service (PaaS)

Cloud Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS)

Deployment Models:

Private cloud

Community cloud

Public cloud

Hybrid cloud

There’s not really anything new here, but that’s fine; it’s more important as a validation of the emerging models and ideas from a public standards body. I do like the three pronged approach, acknowleding that cloud is a lot of things but at the same time keeping it simple and concise. Brevity is the soul of great standards.

It’s worth keeping an eye on this effort.




OMG SOA in Healthcare Conference

I’ll be speaking next week at the Object Management Group’s conference on SOA in Healthcare. It’s next week, June 2-4 at the Hyatt Regency in Chicago.

I’ll be presenting a case study of a deployment we did with the University of Chicago Medical Center. I’ve spoken at a few OMG meetings in the past and they are very good. It kind of feels like a return to my roots. I started my career in a medical imaging research group at the University of British Columbia.

Hope to see you in Chicago.

Upcoming Webinar with David Linthicum

Dave and I are co-presenting a webinar this Thursday, May 27th at 10am Pacific/1pm Eastern. The title is Cloud Control: Reducing the Risk for Cloud Deployments.

It’s going to be great to share the stage with Dave, whose work I have followed for a long time and is truly one of the great thought leaders in the SOA and cloud computing space.

Dave is going to introduce the key issues in cloud governance, and I’m going to present some concrete technological solutions that should be the foundation of your cloud governance program.

I hope you can join us. Register here.

Governance in the Cloud White Paper Now Available

We’ve released the first in my series of white papers on cloud governance. This is the high level overview of issues and solutions, titled Steer Safely into the Clouds. You can download it from the Layer 7 website.

I’d love to hear your comments about it.

GigaOm Piece – SOA Governance Determines Success in the Cloud

I just wrote a short article about SOA Governance and its applicability in the cloud for GigaOm. This is a very influential blog and I’m excited to publish with them.

A Brief, Incomplete, and Mostly Wrong History of Programming Languages

Alex Cruise (who is obsessed with Scala) sent me this awesome history of programming post by James Iry.

I think my favorite entry is this one:

1972 – Dennis Ritchie invents a powerful gun that shoots both forward and backward simultaneously. Not satisfied with the number of deaths and permanent maimings from that invention he invents C and Unix.

I really found the time line interesting. I honestly wouldn’t have guessed Ruby was that old. Everyone thinks of the 70s as such a fertile time in language development (everyone who was anyone came up with a language), but we easily forget the important milestones in the 50s. Half a century later we are still dealing with some of the decisions made in this time.

Recent eBizQ Posts

Lately I’ve been participating in Peter Schooff’s excellent SOA forum on eBizQ. Here are a collection of my recent responses to questions on the forum, in no particular order:

My general profile is here, which will include new commentary.

eBizQ Forum Question: What Do You Believe is the Biggest Inhibitor Today to SOA Adoption?

My thoughts are here.

The Web 2.0 Uniform

Web 2.0 is (in priority order):

  • A conference
  • A handful of technology
  • All that social stuff
  • A look

One thing I noticed by suddenly engaging with all of those things like Twitter that I actively avoided in the past is that they are all surprisingly usable (WordPress included–this is good stuff). In the last year I’ve really begun to re-evaluate JavaScript and what you can realistically do with it. And I have to admit that the mix of JavaScript and some Flash is a pretty powerful combination (I’ve been playing with Flash charting packages a lot).

Here’s a great summary of some of the leading Web 2.0 looks and UI elements. jQuery continually amazes me.

The new blog

Well, I finally did it. I started a blog. Thanks to David Linthicum for pushing me over the edge. I recently spent a bunch of time with Dave and he really inspired me to begin to reach out to the Internet community. 

The focus here is going to be on Web services, SOA, the cloud, and mix of personal stuff that has nothing to do with these but might give you a better perspective on who I am. 

Now at least I have a central place to organize writings. Let the blogging begin…

 -Scott