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Industry News Desk Is Aptana Really a Cloud?
The line between what is considered a cloud and what is paramount to hosting is a blurry line at the best of times
By: Alan Williamson
Nov. 11, 2008 10:00 PM
Alan Williamson's Blog Setting aside all the marketing buzzwords that will get thrown in "scalability" / "on-demand" / "deploy", a cloud offering has to deliver on its hype. For me when words like those are thrown around I want to see:
If an offering does not meet those criteria then for me, I do not believe they are truly offering a cloud experience. They are merely repackaging a hosting package. Running your machines on a virtual platform does not a cloud offering make. Just because a company is charging per-hour instead of per-month, don't be fooled. Look further. Aptana is a company that is renowned for providing an IDE for building web applications, based on the Eclipse toolkit. They have started to pop-up on the cloud radar, that initially confused me, as I tried to fathom out just how they were making this claim. Though their Jaxer product allows you to run your Javascript server-side I wasn't sure how they were making the leap to clouds. Looks like Aptana is moving into the hosted environment, which is a logical step for them considering their big play in the server-side market. What doesn't make sense though is claiming they are now suddenly a cloud offering. They fail to deliver on my 3 step criteria, with the only scaling they seem to offer is within the machine itself (more RAM/HD as and when). No details on how long a machine takes to setup or run, or what happens when you need to grow outside of one machine. No load balancing or image provisioning details. No details on what happens when you need more disk space. No details on any API that can be used to create new machines as and when. Don't get me wrong, but this is a great offering from Aptana and compliments their product suite perfectly. But it is far from a true cloud offering. If they had made more of a play like Google's App Engine, abstracting all the logistics away then yes, we could then put them into the world of cloud computing, but as it stands they seem to offer simply a hosting model for their studio. Demand more from the companies that claim to offer cloud computing. Ask them precisely what makes them different from a traditional hosting company, and if they can't achieve the 3 points I highlighted, then just look at them as you would with a traditional one-server-one-client hosting company. Remember, only one week to go until the free cloud boot camp in San Jose. We've got a lot of material to shoot through, so be sure to come along and get your head truly immersed into what some of the big cloud operators can do for you today. Reader Feedback: Page 1 of 1
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