Contact Us | Request Support | Monitoring Portal | Customer Portal | *

1-650-964-9100

  • Home
  • What is Cloud Computing?
  • Services
    • PrimaCloud Enterprise Cloud Computing
      • Features & Benefits
      • Component Services
      • Virtual Private Data Centers
      • Performance
      • Reliability
      • Security
    • PrimaSys Managed Private Cloud Deployments
      • Choosing Private Cloud
      • Implementation
      • PrimaSys Case Studies
    • PrimaCare Operations-as-a-Service
      • OaaS Detailed Description
      • OaaS Plan Comparison
      • Professional Services
      • Highly Available Cloud Cpanel
    • PrimaView Enterprise Grade Remote Monitoring
      • PrimaView Features
      • PrimaView NimSoft Professional Services
    • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Who You Are
    • Growing Enterprise
    • Start-Up Company or Entrepreneur
    • Colocation or Cloud Computing Customer
    • Shared Hosting or Virtual Private Server User
    • Hosting or Managed Service Provider
    • IT Operations Manager
  • Why Choose ENKI
    • Comparing Cloud Options
    • Case Studies
      • Media Rights Management Company
      • Web Design and Hosting Company
      • Political Web Services Company
      • Media File Sharing Start-Up
      • Financial Services Company
      • Online Gaming Company
      • Internet Advertising Company
      • Hedge Fund
    • Key Benefits
    • Videos & Downloads
    • Buying from ENKI
    • Promotions
    • Testimonials
  • About ENKI
    • The Enki Way
    • Management
    • Partners
    • News
    • Investor Relations
    • Legal
    • Service Level Metrics
  • Enki Blog
Enki Blog

Managed Cloud Blog

  • Home
  • Feed
Apr 30
2008

Web 2.0 Conference Redux: Lowering the barriers to being a web startup

Posted by: Eric Novikoff

Tagged in: Untagged 

A number of us from ENKI went to the Web 2.0 Conference last week.  I wanted to share the single most important take-away that I got from the conference with you.

Last year's conference floor was almost a venture capitalist's fire sale.  There were numerous startup companies exhibiting their concepts and beta sites, vying for mindshare and potentially funding.  However, despite my careful attention to who was walking the aisles, I saw very few investors interested in the startups.  Instead, it seemed that most of the attendees were entrepreneurship fans looking to absorb some of the glory, knowledge, and experience that they would need to start their own companies.  In a many of the conference sessions, the Q&A was - rather irritatingly - taken up by newbs asking the most basic questions of the presenting entrepreneurs to their evident frustration.  It was at times almost like attending a Robert Kiyosaki real estate investment seminar, where the not-so-hidden question is always "how do I make my first 10 million?"

This year, the conference seemed to have learned from last year's experiences, and more of the booths and sessions were tailored to assist people in creating their own Web startup companies.  But the most impressive change is that the industry as a whole understands that creating your own Web startup is not only desirable to a large audience, but also possible with the technologies reaching maturity today. 

What I saw was a large number of products designed to reduce the barrier to going live with your own Web application.  The most obvious were companies such as Google or the many hosted application development systems that create a limited, simplified environment for you to create and deploy your application.  By constraining the environment, the vendor can support your development effort more easily with prewritten code for user interface creation and basic system functions, as well as simplifying deployment into their own application hosting framework.  For many with a simple Web application in mind, these new development and deployment frameworks make life easy.

But there's also help on the way for the more traditional Web applications, developed from scratch in one of the popular implementation systems such as Java, Ruby on Rails, PHP, etc.  I saw a number of standalone application development environments (often based on the versatile Eclipse IDE) that simplify the coding process (perhaps in some case over-simplifying it.)  The most impressive was Liquid Apps, which will generate code for multiple languages, and import specifications such as UML as well.

On the deployment side, I saw a number of new options for entrepreneurs to deploy to the Cloud, beyond the old standby of Amazon's AWS.    Even AWS was dressed up with third parties offering deployment and management solutions that take some of the edge off Amazon's much maligned peccadillos.  What was missing was easy one-touch deployment solutions for the application development environments that would eliminate entrepreneurs' having to become IT experts.

Development and deployment seem to be heavily on the minds of entrepreneurs. I spent much of my time representing ENKI and 3Tera in the 3Tera booth, and I must have fielded hundreds of questions about how to set up a Web application with little or no IT knowledge.   Fortunately, this is the need that ENKI was founded to address, so I had some answers!

However, the answers that I had usually involved ENKI's operations services.  And, I believe there's a good reason for this, which will take a long time for the industry to address.  If I look at what we do for our customers, it will take significant technology advances to automate these operations - if they can be automated at all:

  • application-related virtual data center design
  • middleware and operating system tuning 
  • optimal software release processes
  • application-level monitoring and response
  • optimal database design
  • low down-time management processes
  • design-for-test

Granted, many smaller Web application deployments don't need this level of expertise - but how many of those smaller sites are owned by entrepreneurs who want to grow them to be The Next Big Thing?

So my take-away is that this year's Web 2.0 Conference was all about lowering the barriers to creating and deploying your own Web app - just what many entrepreneurs were looking for.  But what's still missing is a simple end-to-end answer for deployment and management. 

 

Comment (0)
Share to Facebook Share to Twitter Stumble It Share to Reddit Share to Delicious Share to Google Buzz 
Social Widgets Ultimate Edition - Copyright © 2010 by Turnkeye.com

Free Cloud Buyer's Guide

Our informative guide is full of best practices to help you choose the right Cloud vendor for your business and to make your cloud application deployment successful.

Download Now

Latest Blog Entries

  • Going beyond compliance: achieving true security in the Cloud
  • The Straight Dope About Cloud Downtime and the Myth of Perfection
  • The two basic types of cloud architecture
  • Why overallocation makes cloud computing services impossible to compare
  • Does Cloud Computing Drive Vendor Lock-in?
  • Is Amazon "all that?"
  • Report From VMWorld: is the cloud industry getting ahead of itself?
  • Is Cloud Hype Beneficial?
Business Strategy Case Studies Cloud 101 Cloud Industry Cloud Usage Commentary ENKI Information Events First Person Infrastructure News Philosophy Pricing Techniques Technology

Blog Archive

  • March 2012(2)
  • February 2012(2)
  • January 2012(1)
  • September 2011(2)
  • August 2011(2)
  • May 2011(3)
  • April 2011(4)
  • March 2011(1)
  • February 2011(2)
  • January 2011(5)
  • October 2010(1)
  • September 2010(5)
  • August 2010(2)
  • June 2010(1)
  • May 2010(1)
  • April 2010(1)
  • March 2010(1)
  • February 2010(1)
  • January 2010(1)
  • October 2009(2)
  • September 2009(7)
  • August 2009(3)
  • July 2009(3)
  • June 2009(6)
  • May 2009(2)
  • April 2009(4)
  • March 2009(2)
  • February 2009(1)
  • January 2009(1)
  • November 2008(1)
  • October 2008(2)
  • August 2008(4)
  • July 2008(2)
  • June 2008(1)
  • May 2008(1)
  • April 2008(1)
  • February 2008(3)
  • January 2008(3)
  • December 2007(2)
  • November 2007(1)
  • September 2007(1)
  • August 2007(3)
  • June 2007(1)
  • May 2007(1)
  • March 2007(1)
  • February 2007(4)
  • January 2007(3)
OVERVIEW
  • About PrimaCloud
  • About PrimaCare
  • Key Benefits
  • Comparing Cloud Options
HELP CENTER
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Contact Us For Support
  • Terms and Conditions
SELF SERVICE PORTALS
  • PrimaCloud
  • Monitoring
  • Customer Portal
  • Discount Domains & Certificates
Follow @enkicloud
LOGO_CoFounderWebsite
Copyright © 2011 ENKI LLC