For Subscribers

Opportunities in Cloud Computing Virtual 'cloud' holding space is replacing hard-drive-based PC storage.

By Dennis Romero

Opinions expressed by BIZ Experiences contributors are their own.

The barren Santa Susana Mountains loom behind InfoStreet's offices in Tarzana, California. The topic of Microsoft comes up, and CEO Siamak Farah alights like a hillside wildfire. With its free online applications, Google is supplanting Microsoft as the king of desktops. This, he says, "is a paradigm shift."

Here's how to make cloud computing work for you:

Turn Microsoft off.
If you can get by on Google Docs, Gmail and other free cloud services, you can save big. Serena Software says that replacing Microsoft Exchange and Outlook with webmail could pare $750,000 from its annual budget.

Greenlight lower energy bills.
Cloud-based software solutions are greener alternatives because offices can do away with their power-sucking servers and switch to data-center-based companies like NetSuite that let customers share one database, storage space and server, and offer hosted business management software suites. Says NetSuite CEO Zack Nelson, "Cloud computing is far more green than traditional ways of running applications."

Everything from spreadsheets to file storage is moving from hard-drive-based PCs to the internet's "cloud," a virtual storage space and software holding tank. What's in the cloud so far? Services from Google's Gmail to Amazon's Elastic Compute Cloud, or EC2, rental servers to Info-Street's own StreetSmart-to name a few. Cloud computing is booming: It's expected to reach $10.7 billion this year. Salesforce, the leader in SaaS, has a growing customer base. IBM, Yahoo, Intel and Hewlett-Packard have all invested in cloud technology. Even Microsoft has gone to the cloud with Windows Azure.

Switching to the cloud could bring you substantial savings: Serena Software reported that replacing its Microsoft Exchange service with Gmail may save it $750,000 annually. iWidgets, which helps websites integrate with social networks, has gone completely virtual via EC2 at a savings of 75 percent. And Shipwire is connecting the cloud to brick-and-mortar retailing with hands-off storage, shipping and online-store integration for a la carte prices. "This was what the cloud was invented for," says Shipwire chief Damon Schechter. "You can turn Shipwire on without capital costs, employees, tech maintenance or any question of scaling up or down."

The cloud is not without critics. Free Software Foundation founder Richard M. Stallman argues that prices will go up as customer data gets locked in. And Matthew Porter of Contegix says, "A lot of people are being oversold on cloud computing."

But for Farah's company, which grew 25 percent last year, this is the dawn of a new tech era. "It's happening," he says. "It's already out there."

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