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Industry Buzz via Twitter Web Apps Will Be Built in the Cloud: Keynote Systems Exec
Exclusive Q&A with Rajeev Kutty, Keynote Systems
By: Jeremy Geelan
Jan. 16, 2009 06:31 AM
In this Exclusive Q&A with Jeremy Geelan of SYS-CON's Cloud Computing Journal in August 2008, Rajeev Kutty of Keynote Systems speaks of the factors currently driving companies to increase their effort in monitoring the performance of their Web and mobile applications, and about how Keynote foresees an enormous increase in the number of Web applications being built in the cloud and programmers using cloud computing platforms like Apps Engine, Force.com., Microsoft Mesh, Bungee Connect – all Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) providers. Cloud Computing Journal: Web 2.0 approaches have now established themselves firmly in many enterprises, with everyone rushing headlong to deploy their content on the four screens. How thoroughly have such companies been checking performance of their corporate site on actual browsers, networks, and mobile devices? Rajeev Kutty: With more companies adopting Web 2.0 we have noticed the following:
All of these factors are driving companies to increase their effort in monitoring the performance of their Web and mobile applications. Of course this is extremely short sighted and in some ways completely ineffective in the world of the Web. You can't understand the quality of your Web experience by looking at your server uptime or your network throughput. On the other side of the coin, there are many companies that always cared about performance management and understand the tight linkage to user satisfaction, and/or are being forced to consider it along with their push into Web 2.0. These companies generally understand the value of real browser measurement because so much is now happening in the browser, and especially in light of Web 2.0 technology. And they are measuring their new sites, not just single pages or home pages, but entire sites with a browser, from various external points and on mobile devices.
RK: Cloud computing represents a new paradigm for Web performance and provides a new challenge for developing and managing complex service-based applications. Developers are now moving away from writing and hosting applications on their own servers and moving into the cloud. They now store files and data on remote networks using the Internet. Previously, IT departments could quickly solve performance issues in their controlled environment. Now the performance challenges reside in the cloud or even various clouds. Now you need to control application performance across clouds. With cloud computing, Keynote foresees an enormous increase in the number of Web applications being built in the cloud and programmers using cloud computing platforms like Apps Engine, Force.com., Microsoft Mesh, Bungee Connect - all Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) providers.
RK: Given that an application's performance will greatly be affected by how the application is built (composite applications) and by the performance of the underlying cloud infrastructure, Keynote sees greater use of its services when more and more applications start utilizing the cloud computing platform. Performance testing across platforms becomes essential to diagnose and fix issues. An application's performance is influenced by the performance of each cloud and the interaction between clouds - a new paradigm. Businesses are better off having insights into the performance of their applications right from the development stage to the production stage. The key is to test early in the lifecycle -- before the application goes into QA and then into production.
RK: There are five key differentiators...
At O'Reilly's recent Velocity Web Performance & Operations show, we demonstrated KITE. Here's a video capturing some of the first reactions we captured from people who signed up for the Early Adopter Program:http://kite.keynote.com/video/keynote-kite/keynote-kite.html
KITE also provides detailed request and response header information for each element which will help them fine tune the performance of those elements.
Web Application Developers can use it to identify performance bottlenecks while the application is in development. KITE provides a host of metrics that can help developers decide on the caching, image sizes, size of the headers, etc. Quality Assurance (QA) teams can use the point-and-click ease of the KITE interface to develop complex test cases easily and at a much faster rate, thus allowing them to test the performance for each scenario without writing a single line of code. Web Operations team can use KITE to check for the performance bottlenecks to identify issues with the application, CDN performance or hardware infrastructure. Web operations team can group the information by domains and easily spot the servers that slow down the application and take corrective actions.
RK: While Apple has been very effective at promoting the advanced browsing experience available with the iPhone, internet browsers have been available on mobile devices for a while. Nokia's support for Safari on some of it's devices, including the E61/E62 has been there for sometime. Other browsers, like Opera Mobile are also sporting a richer browsing experience on Nokia S60 and Windows Mobile platforms. While these browsers are not yet capable of everything that an Internet Web user can do (neither is the iPhone for that matter), they're still very good and the competition Apple has created should only spur the market for further improvements in this area. Having said that, even with the iPhone's success in navigating standard Internet content, you still see developers creating device-specific rich mobile web apps - even for the iPhone. Apple lists over 2100 on their website alone (http://www.apple.com/webapps/), most developed by third parties. What this really illustrates is that a mobile device, as advanced as the software becomes, is still different enough from a PC that content adapted for one will not be optimal to view on the other. So, while a richer internet experience will continue to evolve on the mobile device, content adapted for mobile will also increase. In fact, taking a step back even further, it is quite likely that in the next decade or two we will see more mobile devices surfing the web than PCs. In that era, we may start talking about adapting content for the large screen (PC), rather than the other way around both in the consumer and in the enterprise market.
RK: KITE is offered free. We request users to sign up at kite.keynote.com to download their copy.
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