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Google's Close To Beating Amazon, Microsoft For a Major Cloud Client: Sources (cnbc.com) 59

An anonymous reader shares a CNBC report: Google's aggressive push into cloud computing, where it trails Amazon.com and Microsoft, has put the internet giant in the lead position to land a marquee client: PayPal. While Google is the front-runner, according to people familiar with the matter, PayPal is evaluating the other leading providers and hasn't made any final decisions. PayPal is unlikely to move its technology infrastructure in the fourth quarter, the peak period for online commerce, said the sources, who asked not to be named because the talks are confidential. Under the leadership of VMware co-founder Diane Greene, Google is out to prove that it's a legitimate player in the rapidly expanding cloud infrastructure market.
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Google's Close To Beating Amazon, Microsoft For a Major Cloud Client: Sources

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  • hybrid vigor (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 30, 2016 @11:18AM (#52796875)

    Maintain enough presence in each provider to provide resiliency, and a big enough stick to push down pricing.

    • by lgw ( 121541 )

      Maintain enough presence in each provider to provide resiliency, and a big enough stick to push down pricing.

      Microsoft and Google are definitely selling at a loss right now. Everyone was surprised that AWS was profitable as the same prices.

      Currently Google cloud stuff is a rounding error next to Azure and AWS (the pie chart is mostly AWS, a slice of Azure, and a sliver of "other" right now). I'd be very nervous using them, given Google's history of abandoning projects that aren't getting traction, but OP had good advice there - just make sure you can move.

      Of course, once you start using all the other cloud servi

      • by swb ( 14022 )

        How much virtual machine compatibility is there between providers?

        Can you maintain a single image that easily runs on all providers, or does it involve micromanagement of differences between them?

        • Can you maintain a single image that easily runs on all providers, or does it involve micromanagement of differences between them?

          Using Docker images instead of VM images, this is easy. However, once you need persistent storage or use hosted apps, such as databases, then migration may be more difficult.

          Google's Kubernetes is a great way to manage containers and is open source. There is no reason AWS or Azure could not support it.

          • by swb ( 14022 )

            Using Docker images instead of VM images, this is easy.

            Unless of course you don't want to or can't use Docker images.

            I get that using cloud vendor integrated infrastructure elements like database service or specialized storage ties you in ways to the provider that are hard to break, but it sure seems like a lot of people have workloads that aren't easily redefinable as Linux Docker solutions.

  • by QuietLagoon ( 813062 ) on Tuesday August 30, 2016 @11:25AM (#52796935)
    Does the cloud provider have IPv6 support? If not, I look elsewhere. Not necessarily because I need IPv6 support now, but because i don't want to be using a cloud that is transitioning to supporting IPv6. That has the possibility of being very disruptive.

    .
    For that reason, I avoid Amazon's AWS. No IPv6 support, even though it's been "available soon" for years. Years!! That tells me that there is some fundamental issue with Amazon's AWS. Did it expand too rapidly, and now the infrastructure is not architected well-enough to provide for future feature enhancements?

    So what cloud providers support IPv6?

    • None of them.

      Now what?

    • Out of curiosity: why do you need it now? Which IPv4 limit is causing your issues at the moment? Are you a DNS provider or something?
      • by gmack ( 197796 )
        The ISP I work for is running out of IPs and is looking at buying new IPv4 addresses on the open market. Google reports that 30% of all US traffic to their servers and 13% worldwide use IPv6. We are already at the point where on mobile networks IPv6 offers a faster page load time thanks to their use of CGNAT on the IPv4 network and that will only get worse as more ISPs roll out CGNAT.. IPv6 is not hard to setup and given how many web hosting/cloud/VPS/Server providers who support IPv6 there is no excus
    • Does the cloud provider have IPv6 support? If not, I look elsewhere. Not necessarily because I need IPv6 support now, but because i don't want to be using a cloud that is transitioning to supporting IPv6. That has the possibility of being very disruptive.

      There are so many factors in determining a cloud provider, solely choosing one based on IPv6 is silly. Who cares if it'll be disruptive in the future if you can't get to where you want at all.

  • the big problem I see with GCE is that you can only assign one IP to an instance; so if you need, for example, a load balancer, you can't run your own. There is no support for Brocade, F5, Netscalers, etc in GCE, you have to use their LB-as-a-service which doesn't meet my company's needs (i.e., we need iRules)
  • teaming up with with the company that drove a spike through the heart of their own "Don't be evil" motto. How appropriate...

    • by bigpat ( 158134 )

      teaming up with with the company that drove a spike through the heart of their own "Don't be evil" motto. How appropriate...

      If you had to take out the evil measuring stick I still think Google is less evil and more honest about when they are evil than other big companies. The ethos of the company is still driven by innovation and use of cutting edge technology to make people's lives easier.

      Yes, they are still making boatloads of money on tracking people and targeting them with ads, but other companies are also tracking people and selling information about people and they aren't even telling you what they are collecting and how

  • Gut check (Score:2, Informative)

    by U8MyData ( 1281010 )
    As an IT person for over twenty years, I still pain at this cloud presence. Who owns your data? Google, Amazon, Microsoft? Might as well give all your keys to someone else. Wait, when the federal government gets into the cloud infrastructure will I feel any different? No. Sales, marketing, and the all too easy "it's what everyone else is doing" argument. Remember, easy is a four letter word. Lemmings....
    • You still own your data if you encrypt it...at least as far as Google, Amazon, and Microsoft would be concerned.
    • Re:Gut check (Score:4, Interesting)

      by swillden ( 191260 ) <shawn-ds@willden.org> on Tuesday August 30, 2016 @02:29PM (#52798317) Journal

      As an IT person for over twenty years, I still pain at this cloud presence. Who owns your data? Google, Amazon, Microsoft?

      What, specifically, are you afraid will happen?

      I can see being worried about handing your business data to a service provider who may be a competitor, but are you actually competing with any of these? And would they really get enough value from looking at your data to justify the immense damage to their business if they were caught spying on customers in violation of contractual obligations? Not likely. I suppose I could see Wal-mart refusing to host their data on AWS because there's a clear competitive conflict, and Wal-mart is big enough that Amazon might want to spy on them, but those cases are pretty rare, I think.

      If your concern is about data loss if the provider goes belly up or has severe problems (e.g. a data center burns to the ground) then (a) your fears are pretty misplaced with respect to AWS, Azure or GCE, and (b) you should be keeping backups regardless of whether you're running your own systems or using a provider. If your concern is about downtime, your fears are really misplaced. The big cloud providers are much better at that than you are.

      I know a number of small and mid-size companies that have never operated their own data centers, or even had colos, and are extremely happy with the way that works. It makes them able to respond to changes in business much more quickly and keeps their overhead low, especially during the early phases. Sign up a huge new client and need to double your capacity? Log on and fire it up (assuming you've architected for scalability). No need to worry about floor space or purchase orders or installation schedules. Lose a huge client or find an optimization and need to cut capacity by 30%? Log on and shut it down. No need to figure out what to do about the idled equipment or floor space. These companies find it's much better to stay focused on what they do well, writing software and selling services, rather than staff up big organizations to manage data center operations.

      One significant (~600-person) and quite profitable SaaS company I know doesn't own *any* computing hardware. Their computing equipment is completely BYOD, employees use their own laptops, tablets and phones (with reimbursement, so I suppose their accountants might argue they own some stuff, technically). When they had to move buildings recently (due to growth), they simply leased a new building and told everyone (those who don't telecommute) to show up at the new location the next week. The new building had cubicles and wired and wireless Internet in place (w/redundant providers), all part of the lease. They did contract some movers to haul boxes of personal items from the old building to the new one, including developers' large monitors. The CEO likes to joke that he could move the entire company to a beach-side resort in Belize and they could all continue working without the slightest interruption, as long as the resort had good Wifi.

      That's a bit extreme, and there's no doubt that that level of flexibility isn't free, but it's not as expensive as you might think. Moreover, if your workload is very static, and your IT department is solid and smooth-functioning, and labor costs in your area are low, it will cost more to pay a cloud provider than to do it yourself. Or if you have particularly-sensitive data to manage (and actually know how to manage it... something that is *rarely* true in my 15 years' experience as an IT security consultant), you may need to have your own hardware. But for many, many companies, the cloud is cheaper, faster, more flexible and more secure.

    • Don't you read the ToS?

    • I stand by my comment. In an archive of Slashdot 5 years from now, my perspective might be clear. Name calling is adolescent sir/ma'am. ToS, is nothing more than a statement and separate from actuality. One might claim they are PCI compliant, for example, when in reality it sis a smoke screen. Been there, seen that too many times. I will not comment further....
  • I take it Softlayer is last on that list ...
  • What gets me about "the cloud", is that at least for Amazon it appears that there are multiple clouds. You can still have outages. Doesn't sound like Amazon is doing "the cloud" right to me. Anybody else have any thoughts on this?

  • Presumably the mysterious "sources" ("people familiar with the matter") are Google trying to hype up their cloud business which is either #2 or #3 depending on whom you talk to. There's no reason for anyone else to "spill the beans".

    I use all those scare quotes because the whole thing is rediculous. Reporters used to care about being played; now they can't be bothered worrying about it.

    There are plenty of reasons to choose Google over Amazon and to choose Amazon over Google. Hype is not one of them.

    • Are they even that high? For #3 I had 5-6 potential names in my mind before Google... aside from just hosted email.

      • It's hard to get good info since the term is so mushy. I was thinking specifically of a combination of running code customer code, storing data, and providing related services. I.e. not just storage (dropbox or box) or vendor provided service (gmail, fastmail, openDNS) or just VMs (maybe i should consider that but I don't use VMs/VPSes).

        So in my perhaps artificially restricted definition AWS is the clear #1. I hear anecdotally that microsoft is doing pretty well but their offerings, afaict, aren't of any

  • by dohzer ( 867770 )

    Trump would make a good president: Sources.

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