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      Not me but an incredibly realistic simulation.
      John Evdemon
      is an Architect
      at Microsoft.

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    Internet Scale Computing

    Short excerpt from a paper to be published soon.   Feedback welcome.

    The only constant in the world of technology is change. Service Delivery in both the enterprise and consumer space is undergoing significant change and the line between them is becoming blurred, enabling each of these domains to take advantage of the technologies of the other. Traditional enterprise solutions such as line of business applications (LOBs) and service registries are starting to incorporate concepts associated with "Web 2.0" such as AJAX, wikis, community feedback and other popular trends. Likewise, consumer services are looking to web services standards as a way to enable security, trust, non-repudiation and other requirements typically associated with enterprise solutions.

    Extreme scalability in consumer services is critical since the targeted user base is far broader and more diverse than a single enterprise. Service interruptions in consumer services can be detrimental to the financial status of both service providers and service consumers. In late 1999 eBay was unavailable for a little over twenty-two hours and as a result suffered significant financial losses. Today we are seeing similar scalability challenges facing consumer-oriented service providers such as Skype, Amazon, MySpace and others.

    The challenge of extreme scalability is further compounded by inefficiency and poor utilization of resources within the datacenter. Server farms are designed and built for maximum load conditions and dedicated to specific solutions, effectively locking horizontally-oriented resources into vertically-oriented “solution silos”. Average datacenter utilization rates typically range from 15-20%. These incredibly low utilization rates detrimentally impact infrastructure and solution ROI levels.

    The emergence of broadly available consumer-oriented services coupled with requirements for extreme scalability and higher utilization rates leads us to a new computing paradigm we call Internet Scale Computing (ISC).

    Internet map created by the Opte Project.   Click on the graphic for more info.

    Update: Thanks Joe!

    Posted: Wednesday, October 24, 2007 11:16 PM by jevdemon

    Comments

    Mark Baker said:

    Internet scale computing isn't a new paradigm, it's quite old.  About as old as the Internet, in fact 8-)

    # October 28, 2007 1:25 AM

    james said:

    Yea, this made me laugh, frankly absurd. sorry man, being original about the web is hard, so maybe try something else.

    # October 28, 2007 12:01 PM

    jevdemon said:

    Hey guys thanks for commenting.   I am in full agreement with you to a point.   The concept of Internet Scale Computing is as old as the Internet itself - about 39 years old if one considers ARPANet.  The "new" here refers to how cloud-based services augmenting or replacing traditional IT infrastuctures is being broadly adopted by mainstream organizations (largely due to the advent of open standards and RESTful architectural principles).   I guess I need to revise this - it is a draft after all.   Thanks for commenting!

    # October 30, 2007 2:06 PM
    New Comments to this post are disabled
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