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Posted On
Jul 16, 2008
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Experts world over are grappling with a new kind of confusion that is trivial for the common man. But for the purists who have invested so much time and research work to study a particular phenomenon, its really tough to call it trivial. Anyone who has been intimately involved in the evolution of the SaaS or cloud computing worlds has a right to be frustrated by the blurring of the lines between the two concepts. So the obvious question over here is- are the two same or different?
We will go step by step.Firstly we will analyze the two topics in brief and then we will focus on similarities and differences.Let’s begin with SaaS first as it appeared first on the IT radar as compared to Cloud Computing which came into existence few years back. Cloud computing has already been discussed in detail in our previous blog “Amazon on Cloud nine via Elastic Compute Cloud.”
Software as a Service
SaaS is the acronym for Software as a Service.It is also known as Software on Demand. In simple words, an application that is delivered through the SaaS model typically is done so:
Cloud Computing Cloud computing refers to the virtualization of the data center, such that server machines are not thought of individually but as just a commodity in a greater collection of server machines. Cloud computing solutions in general strive to eliminate the need for an application deployer to be aware of the actual physical machines that are used to host the application. Some have called this idea “hardware as a service”. Read More
For all software developing companies, if they want to provide their software as a service, they need to host their software somewhere in the cloud and provide storage to store and access the user’s data. Also they will have to store all the user’s data in the same place, but the data identifies itself whom it belongs to (Multi-tenancy) think of like a apartment number, if you are living in apartments complex sharing the same address.
SaaS and Cloud Computing Cloud Computing is viewed as a broad array of web-based services aimed at allowing users to obtain a wide range of functional capabilities on a “pay for what you use” basis that previously required tremendous hardware/software investments and professional skills to acquire. Cloud computing is the realization of the earlier ideals of utility computing without the technical complexities or complicated deployment worries. With this precept in mind, SaaS can be seen as a subset or segment of the cloud computing market that is growing all the time.
Unfortunately, opportunistic vendors, as well as uneducated journalists and overly simplistic industry analysts, are using the terms interchangeably to serve their own purposes.While this might infuriate industry purists, the good news is that both ideas are gaining greater mainstream attention and acceptance as a result of escalating coverage in nearly every IT industry trade publication and even more importantly among the major business pubs like the Wall Street Journal, Forbes, Fortune and BusinessWeek, along with the NY Times. To make things very simple:
- Cloud computing is an "infrastructure" response, a substitute to in-house data centers.
- SaaS is a "usage" response, a substitute to classical software licensing solutions.
IT today
- Infrastructure: In house
- Usages: Software licences
IT tomorrow
- Infrastructures: Cloud computing
- Usages: SaaS
This positive development far outweighs the potential confusion that could arise about the nuances between the two concepts. The surge in demand for cloud computing and SaaS is partially due to macro-market factors, such as the recessionary economic climate and escalating pressures to fundamentally change traditional business practices. But, growing interest in cloud computing and SaaS is also the result of the success and satisfaction of the early adopters who are not only renewing and expanding their use of these web-based services, but recommending them to others, according to THINKstrategies' research and consulting experience.
The 'gold rush' stage we are entering in the cloud computing and SaaS movement will attract plenty of self-serving vendors, overnight experts and tabloid press who will attempt to exploit this exciting market opportunity.
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