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Cringley's Next 2019 Predictions: Only 3.5 Cloud Players Will Survive (cringely.com) 148

Ten days ago 66-year-old tech pundit Robert Cringely revealed the first of what may be his final set of annual predictions for the technology industry -- but he's not done yet. Thursday Cringely predicted that "the Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) solution based on Open Source using Linux will change the Internet-as-a-Service Cloudscape to VPC-only during 2019" -- and that there'll be an industry-wide shakeout.

Long-time Slashdot reader supremebob, a Connecticut-based sys-admin, writes: He seems to believe that IBM Cloud and Oracle Cloud and doomed to fail, and Alibaba will only survive because of its strong Chinese presence. These seem like safe predictions, but his comments on Google Cloud are somewhat controversial...
After AWS, Alibaba, and Microsoft, "All the others will eventually disappear," Cringely writes, adding "Remember you read it first here." Google's largest cloud customer will always be Google and that will inevitably lead to poorer service for outside customers. That's why I think of Google Cloud as half of a player. Feel free to prove me wrong by delighting customers, Google... I don't see the marketing effort to help clients migrate. Lots of handholding is needed that IBM and Microsoft are happy to provide. Google does not understand customers whose IQs are sub-200. As such, Google doesn't have (and likely won't) have a history of winning outside of search advertising.

For IBM, their VPC roll-out is coming in the next month or two, but it's more marketing than an actual product. Big Blue simply has no capital to build out a unique offering. And Oracle? Well the new head of Google Cloud came from Oracle, where not enough was happening.

Cringely also predicts the U.S. government will try to force Amazon to spin-off its near-monopoly cloud business, noting that "the larger customers of AWS (those not operating on a credit card) generally hate Amazon because of its ruthless business behavior."

Lots of pressure will come to bear in this case from IBM, Microsoft, and Oracle, who are all suffering from a very specific database problem competing with AWS. Each of these companies sells their own database (DB2, SQL Server, and Oracle, respectively) that they've rolled into their cloud services. AWS's RDB, in contrast, is based on MySQL and costs Amazon almost nothing to support, giving the biggest cloud player a clear pricing advantage.
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Cringley's Next 2019 Predictions: Only 3.5 Cloud Players Will Survive

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  • WTF is Internet-as-a-Service? As-a-Service usually means it's somewhere else and you have to give somebody a load of cash and use the internet to reach it.

    Do I need to buy more internets now?

    • This is just marketing for the grandma's and grandpa's who run things. Yes, you need to purchase more internet....and security. You need to purchase more security.
    • With internet as a service, you would never even worry about buying more internets; you'd have all the internet you needed right at your fingertips!

      I guess the alternative to internet-as-a-service would be to lay some fiber to the backbone and try to sign a peering agreement with somebody?

    • by darkain ( 749283 )

      In once sense, the "internet" is simply a lot of interconnected networks. Following? AWESOME! Now, there is a new "as a service" that is emerging right now, SD-WAN, or "software defined wide area network" - it is simply a virtualized network on top of the internet, much like VLANing is a virtualized network on top of a physical network. SD-WAN is essentially an "internet as a service" as it allows multiple networks to become interconnected virtually to create a wide-area, or pseudo-internet on top of the ph

      • .... like MPLS?
        • by Zak3056 ( 69287 )

          SD-WAN "competes" with MPLS in the sense that the vendors want you to ditch your expensive MPLS links for their offering that runs on commodity internet bandwidth. They do offer some decent features (everything after the first couple of hops is typically private network, so latency is fairly predictable/manageable/comparable to MPLS), they can bake in WAN acceleration, redundancy is trivial, etc.

          In the end, though, they cost as much (or more than!) MPLS. Typical cloud business model of replacing what you h

      • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

        OMG, someone invented a router with a VPN connection. Or maybe they just use SSH tunnels?

  • Nation demanding their citizens data is kept safe in their own nations. With their own workers getting well paid local jobs looking after the domestic cloud services. 24/7 staffing at with professional level wages.
    The EU nations will want to control tax and speech, comments, data, images due to politics and to enforce EU censorship.
    China will demand control over its own data due to Communist party censorship.
    The USA will offer freedom and try to enter a lot of markets globally only to find local laws d
    • Nonsense (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Lurks ( 526137 ) on Sunday March 10, 2019 @09:36PM (#58250022) Homepage

      Everything you said is stuff that international corporations have been dealing with since long before the cloud existed.

      The prevailing model has always been to hold local corps accountable, regardless of who they are owned by. They often have to modify their offering to comply with local laws. What, exactly, is so special about cloud computing services that makes this less true?

      The dominant cloud model is already built on local points of presence. Much of the rest of what you're talking about is a random spray of complaints that some people don't want to comply with local environment. Well sure, they don't, but at the end of the day there's billions of dollars at stake, so they will.

      Clearly the greatest advantage for cloud providers is the technical capability to spin up infrastructure, not the physical hosting of it in the United States. For most of the planet, the US is unacceptably distant from a latency perspective anyway.

      • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
        The cost saving that was to allow the USA to out bid any nations domestic service for cloud support.
        In terms of storage limits, quality 24/7 support costs, lower energy costs, better quality encryption, free speech, banking support, bandwidth costs, peering. Legal and tax support. Newer and better servers. Better CPU support for the costs.
        The USA was to be supporting the worlds computer network use at a lower cost from the USA.
        That all changed withe EU laws, EU censorship, EU nations tax rates, the c
        • by nasch ( 598556 )

          The cost saving that was to allow the USA to out bid any nations domestic service for cloud support....
          That all changed withe EU laws, EU censorship, EU nations tax rates, the censorship demands of a Communist gov in China.

          Citation needed. It seems much more likely to me that customers want a data center that's relatively close rather than halfway around the world, for performance reasons. Besides which about half your cost saving factors probably aren't a cost saving compared to other developed economies anyway.

          • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
            What could any US brand offer nations globally then?
            Hosting in the USA under a US brand has to offer something over services offered in a Germany, France, Japan...
            Price, crypto, more CPU power, code support, support staff, tax, freedom, peering, bandwidth?
            Re "customers want a data center that's relatively close rather than halfway around the world"
            Governments start using laws, censorship and tax to make much better US products and services less attractive?
            Protectionism using laws, censorship, tax an
            • by nasch ( 598556 )

              Hosting in the USA under a US brand has to offer something over services offered in a Germany, France, Japan...

              Why?

              • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
                US bandwidth, storage and international peering support?
                US tax and legal protections.
                The sending of data to and from the USA is lower cost than trying to buy the same level of support and service in another nation?
                Something great makes the global computer community return decade after decade to US products and services over their own nations computer attempts.
                • by nasch ( 598556 )

                  I think either you're mistaken, or I'm misunderstanding you. I believe companies serving their customers in Europe generally choose data centers in Europe, not the US. Similarly for Asia. In addition, there are now serious legal issues with sending EU users' data outside the EU. You seem to be arguing that these companies mostly want to use data centers in the US for various reasons, and I don't think this is correct.

                  What I know for certain is that the big cloud providers do in fact have data centers all

                  • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
                    The cost of looking after data in the EU was what set its price apart form US services and products located in the USA.
                    Staff costs, CPU costs, better software access. The USA could offer that at a lower cost over time with better service.
                    It was better and had lower peering costs to use the USA than to pay more to stay in a EU nation.
                    Thats what set US networking apart from the costs of the EU nations.
                    Not every service and product needs the fast in nation only networks.
                    Large amounts of data and CPU cost
  • by Temkin ( 112574 ) on Sunday March 10, 2019 @09:52PM (#58250066)

    AWS will survive and continue to be king of the hill, but it would not surprise me to see it become part of a forced divestiture / anti-trust kind of thing... As a certified M$-Hater, it pains me to say Azure is quite healthy, and works quite well. The interesting things happening between these two right now is the push to move to "serverless" logic. S3 buckets and lambda functions all the way down... Is becoming today's vendor lock in play...

    But I must say, having used Softlayer a bit... What the hell are they smoking over at IBM? You go to spin up a template, and it's 20 minutes to two hours before you get anything... Are they paying the janitor to go push buttons on their coffee break!?!? Seriously...

    • by _merlin ( 160982 )

      Really? That long? Instances become available in seconds on Hetzner, and well under five minutes on AliYun. What's IBM doing?

    • That's probably why they're rolling out new offerings this year.

    • Azure isn't fast either. Recently I tried to convert my 30 GB S1 database to an S2 database. The process timed out after three days.

  • Oracle is in court claiming Amazon is selling a commodity to the US DOD and therefor shouldn't have an exclusive deal for a long time. The US courts have agreed with that argument in the past. If the courts rule that a specific cloud service is just like any other, then the door is open for all the competition and the big 3 don't have the best price. The 2nd tier cloud providers are much cheaper than the big three and seem to have better tech support.

    I've been renting space for my own hardware in data ce

  • > AWS's RDB, in contrast, is based on MySQL and costs Amazon almost nothing to support

    Not quite.

    If the author meant RDS, that is MariaDB, MySQL, PostgreSQL, MS SQL Server, or Oracle.

    If the author meant Amazon Aurora, that's is own technology with an interface that looks like MySQL and one that looks like PostgreSQL but it is neither one.

  • by dohzer ( 867770 )

    What's this Cloud v3.5?

  • I stopped reading his predictions column after he said he was going to stop doing them, five years running. Glad to see he's still at it though, but I really feel like I've moved on.

  • Is it possible IBM and Oracle merge to gain cloud muscle?

  • AMZ business tactics are no different than Chinese;

  • but I predict a switch to private cloud services (e.g. cloud service running on a set of hardware and software belonging to a corporation) in about 5-10 years. whoever comes up with a best offer, will dominate the field for the following 20 years or so.

  • by nicolaiplum ( 169077 ) on Monday March 11, 2019 @03:24AM (#58250988)

    MySQL is also available in the Oracle cloud: https://cloud.oracle.com/mysql [oracle.com]

    Of course it's the Enterprise version and I'm sure that internally Oracle (mysql division) are billing oracle (cloud division) in funny-money, but the actual cost to provide it for Oracle is very low. There aren't many differences, or much coding effort, between the Community (Free) and Enterprise MySQL - just enough to get Enterprises to pay for the extra audit and thread pool (i.e. helpers for crappy applications that can't use a database correctly) support.

    However the big point of Oracle cloud is not that it has MySQL, but that it can supply your on-premises private cloud infrastructure as well as off-premises public cloud. Their aim is to satisfy those people who want their data on-premises for one reason or another, but don't want to have to do the work of building that infrastructure themselves.

    MS Azure cloud is wildly popular with Linux people, rather to MS's surprise - there are far more Linux customers than Windows Server customers in Azure. Meanwhile, if you want to run your desktop app back end in the cloud (i.e. Office 365) and have decent Windows hosting, Azure will do that for you with one supplier contract. That's a really strong advantage of Azure. Microsoft still has the global hold on office applications and they can, if they're reasonably smart, transition that into becoming the "inevitable" cloud supplier for companies with a lot of office-application users.

    IBM... isn't looking like it has any of the advantages. They don't have the advantage of being the first choice for Chinese companies, nor the cheapest and biggest, nor the public/private single interface, nor the obvious place to keep your MS desktop apps while closing your datacenter. They're also late to the game.

    • The big problem with Oracle's cloud is that it's being run by Oracle. The distinguishing feature of Oracle is that they will always try to fuck you over. Sure, everyone does it sometimes, but Oracle does it always.

  • ...who the .5 one will be.

  • MS, Amazon, IBM, Google, they are just the "big" players. My company uses a much smaller provider called Omnipotech. These smaller providers are everywhere, and they are not going away just because the big boys are fighting for market share.

  • Lots of pressure will come to bear in this case from IBM, Microsoft, and Oracle, who are all suffering from a very specific database problem competing with AWS. Each of these companies sells their own database (DB2, SQL Server, and Oracle, respectively) that they've rolled into their cloud services. AWS's RDB, in contrast, is based on MySQL and costs Amazon almost nothing to support, giving the biggest cloud player a clear pricing advantage.

    This is not true.

    There are a wide range of database engines to choose in AWS. RDS [amazon.com] explicitly lets you choose from Postgres, MySQL, MariaDB or - Oracle or even SQL Server. And guess what else? Microsoft themselves offer a managed MariaDB instance [microsoft.com] on Azure! This guys post is straight-up bullshit and looks like he did zero fact-checking.

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