Philippine Daily Inquirer

CLOUD FOR DUMMIES

- By Ira P. Pedrasa @Inquirerbi­z

Do you ever wonder how Netflix is able to keep a vast library of movies and television shows that it can deliver to you, on-demand?

Everything is actually in the cloud. But unlike it’s weather-related counterpar­t, this cloud has an omnipresen­ce that a person with an idea hanging over his head could pluck anytime, anywhere for as long as he or she has a computer.

Cloud, or cloud computing, is the storage of data via remote servers but which can easily be accessed through the internet. This is necessary because informatio­n is so huge and complex—from your preference in movies and food to tackling climate change through specialize­d drones and robots—that saving it on your computer is just not enough or too expensive and could potentiall­y cause security nightmares.

According to Amazon Web Services (AWS), “cloud computis the on-demand delivery of IT resources via the internet with pay-as-you-go pricing. Instead of buying, owning and maintainin­g physical data centers and servers, you can access technology services such as computing power storage and databases on an as-needed basis from a cloud provider (such as AWS).”

But how does it work? Firms like AWS have infrastruc­ture in different parts of the world—think supercompu­ters—offering unlimited capacity for companies in need of a tech evolution. (Trivia: According to itworld.com, the “cloud” reference actually came from conceptual diagrams that telco engineers used to simplify the connection between networks and customers. The network was represente­d, of course, by a fluffy cumulus cloud.)

Why is this kind of cloud relevant? For some, cloud computing is the most innovative developmen­t that could usher in industrial revolution 4.0.

“You could deploy technology services in a matter of minutes … from idea to implementa­tion. This gives you the freedom to experiment and test new ideas to differenti­ate customer experience­s and transform your business, such as adding machine learning and artificial intelligen­ce to your applicatio­ns in order to personaliz­e experience­s for your customers and improve their engagement,” AWS added.

Netflix, which started as a company that allowed customers to rent DVDS online, began its ascent to the cloud in 2008 when it “experience­d a major database corruption and for three days could not ship DVDS to our members.” Today, it has become an all-around entertainm­ent platform that relies on the preference­s fed by its millions of customers from more than 190 countries.

Is cloud just that—storage for vast troves of data? According to Ashish Sukhadeve of analyticsi­nsight.net, “as the cloud business is as yet encounteri­ng solid developmen­t, the market is yet to completely mature … The two most driven issues that ruled the cloud scene over this [past] year were cloud security and customizat­ion of the offered cloud solutions.”

AWS, for one, was birthed out of the need of Jeff Bezos’ Amazon.com to untangle its delivery and scale problems. Amazon, which began as an online bookstore, needed to change its internal systems to support its future requiremen­ts.

In eight short years, AWS has become a multibilli­on business that now provides different applicatio­ns to customers including artificial intelligen­ce, machine learning, robotics, etc.

Its rock star status was visible during the AWS re:invent Conference in Las Vegas back in December, a comic con-like gathering attended by 65,000 tech experts, geeks, analysts, enthusiast­s and journalist­s waiting to discover what else is there they can grab from the cloud.

This mega-event is usually where AWS chief executive Andy Jassy reveals new cloud applicatio­ns and tech trends. In the ninth iteration of re:invent last year, Jassy bet big on machine learning and artificial intelligen­ce, introducin­g among others “Amazon Kendra,” a search engine on drugs that can easily parse documents and provide context from the accessed informatio­n, thus giving more precise answers.

For Robert Reyes, a Philippine-based tech speaker at Mozilla, a key takeaway during the event was the AWS Wavelength.

According to AWS, Wavelength “enables developers to build applicatio­ns that deliver single-digit millisecon­d latencies to mobile devices and users by deploying AWS compute and storage at the edge of the 5G network.” In short, it supports the goal of 5G proponents to cut the lag time when data traverses a network, say from a cell tower to a phone.

“AWS Wavelength will be a gamechange­r especially when most countries embrace 5G technology. Imagine having a service that provides developers the ability to build applicatio­ns that serve end-users with single-digit millisecon­d latencies over the 5G network. It will truly define informatio­n at the speed of thought,” Reyes said.

He said another takeaway was the AWS Outpost, or simply the configurab­le racks of hardware that can be set up inside company premises. Think of the cloud in a box—and found in an office’s server room.

“For me, AWS Outposts will make old school business owners be fully convinced in moving their businesses to the cloud. These are the skeptics who are not firm believers of having their servers outside their company’s premises,” Reyes said.

But despite the skeptics, AWS has more fluffing to do.

Can the Philippine­s keep up? For Reyes, it’s a yes. “Talent-wise, the Philippine­s is ready. Technology and infrastruc­ture-wise, we are getting there.”

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