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Cloud
services: Computus Interruptus
'Net Insider By
Scott Bradner, Network World
March 20, 2013 09:59 AM ET
I use Google Docs as part of my day
job. On one recent morning I accessed a file and updated it but when I went
back a short time later I got a "502" error page -- something had
gone amok in Google land. Everything seemed to work when I tried a few hours
later, but the incident was a forceful reminder of one of the important
features of cloud services -- when they go down so do you.
The message I got was less than
helpful: "502. That's an error. The server encountered a
temporary error and could not complete your request. Please try again in 30
seconds. That's all we know." It was a lot longer than 30 seconds before
things worked again.
This was not a major outage for me and
I had no trouble finding other things to do with my time, but I wonder what the
impact was on the few million other people who also had to find things to do
other than what they originally planned.
Google Docs has been generally
reliable, but its users have suffered some disruptions of service over the
years. (See here,
here
and here.)
Other cloud service providers have had
much worse problems. Some of Microsoft's services were
off the air for a good chunk of a day last week, and an administrative
mix-up caused a days-long
outage of the Microsoft Azure cloud service back in February, with a
similar problem a year ago. Amazon has had numerous and significant
outages. (See here,
here
and here).
In the face of this semi-reliable
technical world Microsoft is trying to convince us all that the cloud is a
great place to live. Office 365 offers a passel of cloud-based services.
Microsoft wants us to think that Office 365 represents the future as being
anchored to a cloud rather than to a machine. There is some attractiveness in
that vision as long as you trust the solidity of the cloud and the cloud
vendor. Microsoft's Office 365 cloud is
not perfect but seems to have been generally reliable.
I guess I'm a bit of an old fart stuck
in my ways. I do use cloud services, including Google Docs, but I use them for
collaboration -- not for original creation. I do the creation on my own
computers, where I control the access and, to some degree, the reliability,
before transferring the result to the cloud for group development. I do my own
backup of the material on my systems so I am not toast if a company goes out of business or changes
business models.
Maybe I like the illusion of control,
but I am not yet ready to let go and float. The worry of what might happen when
human or other failures turns off the anti-gravity machine, and the worry of
who thinks they own what I write and what I do make me not yet ready to trust
wholeheartedly in the fog that is the cloud.
Disclaimer:
Harvard is exploring and using a lot of cloud-based services. I do not know the
level of comfort the average university user has in these developments, nor has
the university yet made any particular affirmation of trust. So the above
distrust represents my own feelings.
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