By Adam Stern | Business.com
Back when the cloud was the next big thing, skeptics questioned its reliability, its durability and, above all, its security. Over time, each concern has been addressed and largely resolved. The wisdom of off-premises computing is now practically a given.
But cloud computing isn’t a religious issue. We can believe that moving critical applications and mission-critical data off local gear is strategically smart, safe and cost-effective, and still acknowledge that growing pains have tested, and will continue to test, the model. With the cloud’s maturity comes some degree of ossification and even inefficiency.
Over the years, I’ve sought to debunk myths and hype around cloud computing’s flavors of the month: public, private, hybrid, fog, etc. They all taste great. They’re all less filling. My point has been that terminology too often masks an intention to fix things that aren’t broken, to repackage and sell things that already exist and work well, and to find alternatives to solutions that have proven themselves eminently capable of enhancing business processes.
As Upton Sinclair memorably put it, “it is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends on his not understanding it.” Because the tendency in technology is to tease the “next next big thing,” the temptation to apply a bear hug to the latest and greatest can be hard to resist, whether or not we fully know what we’re embracing.
That’s where we are with edge computing. Before this bit of jargon fully morphs into a way of doing business, IT consumers, IT professionals and IT pundits all need to understand what it is substantively and where it lapses into change for change’s sake.
Recent headlines underscore the point: “Michael Dell: Why edge computing could be the next big thing”; “Edge computing: The next big thing in networking technology”; “What is edge computing, and is it the next big thing?; “Edge computing emerges as the next big thing in tech, and Taiwan will help power it.”
Unlike some of its vaporous predecessors in the IT realm, edge computing is legit. Edge strives to get business rules, and at least some data, closer to the user. While it’s easy enough to be bamboozled by buzzwords, the decision to push middleware closer to the user is, in some cases, a wise one. In a way, it’s cloud computing with a caveat, or an asterisk. “Off-premises cloud” sounds like an oxymoron, but in a dispersed physical environment – say, a corporate campus with a data center serving satellite offices edge computing makes sense.
Many of us naturally want local equipment to perform locally and thereby spare us from chasing around the internet. But that’s a pretty application-specific approach, and it’s not at all clear that every application needs to go that direction. It’s important to ask whose ox is being gored in this scenario. Who has a vested interest in staying on premises or returning to the older model in a significant way?
Might that someone be old-line equipment manufacturers? Apart from the rationale of being closer to the user in some limited instances, it would seem that the biggest champions of edge computing are those who lost the most by going to the cloud. Where’s the demand for a methodology that brings servers back to their locations?
Today, a certain number of large players seek to commoditize the market. They want their service to be a commodity because it’s easier to compete simply on price, never mind educating the user community. So it’s fair to ask, does edge computing solve a real problem, or is it more of a backdoor entrance through which the old guard can re-establish its hegemony?
From my POV, edge computing is not a movement or even a bona fide trend. It’s a subset of a subset. Users need to tune out the noise and decide what technology best meets their business requirements. Which solution provider enables them to be at their nimblest and most competitive? Obvious as it may seem, organizations need to look at their needs. Common sense is the great leveler; it renders hype obsolete.
So remember Occam’s razor: The simplest answer is often the right one. To avoid falling off the edge, opt for local computing where you have to, and the cloud everywhere else.
Adam Stern
Stern is an entrepreneur who saw the value of virtualization and cloud computing nearly a decade ago. Stern’s company helps businesses move from obsolete hardware investments to an IaaS [Infrastructure as a Service] cloud platform, providing them the flexibility and scalability to transition select data operations from in-house to the cloud. Stern established Infinitely Virtual in 2007 to provide virtual dedicated server solutions to growing enterprises, offering what was essentially a cloud computing platform before the term existed. Infinitely Virtual is a subsidiary of Santa Monica-based Altay Corporation, which Stern founded in 2003 to provide Windows, VMware and other service solutions to the SMB market.