Survey: Value of the Cloud, Telecommuting Overstated

Microsoft, Google, Amazon and Cisco, take notice: Despite the near-constant hype about cloud computing services, most mid-market companies are still viewing cloud as a complement, not a replacement Microsoft 70-640 Training .”..

 

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SWC Technology Partners surveyed 210 mid-market IT and business leaders and found that cloud computing, at least for the mid-market and even more so in the enterprise, is still very early in its evolution. The survey also revealed a few surprises about the acceptance of telecommuting in the mid-market.

The disconnect between the hype of cloud computing and the actual implementation of cloud computing reared its head in the SWC survey. Only 3.7 percent of respondents said that their company has adopted a cloud computing solution for the entire company. And, over half (54.2 percent) of the respondents indicate that their company is not pursuing a single cloud computing initiative. Privacy and security (20.9 percent) were listed as the biggest concern when considering the cloud, followed by cost (9.8 percent).

“The technology industry can be rife with hype,” said Elliott Baretz, Vice President of SWC. “Most reasons for eschewing the cloud have nothing to do with technology. Privacy and compliance and legal issues are what are keeping businesses on the sidelines.”

Of the cloud services that are in production, Microsoft Exchange and SharePoint hold a comfortable lead, an indication that e-mail, productivity tools and document management are the top candidates to go to the cloud. Almost 65 percent of respondents using a cloud service are using Microsoft Exchange Online and 48 percent are using Microsoft SharePoint Online. Google is also in the running, with 24 percent opting for Google Cloud Services (i.e. Google Apps). Surprisingly, Amazon’s EC2 cloud service only captured 7.4 percent.

Baretz says that most cloud adoption is happening at the SMB and start-up level where the cost to benefit ratio favors the cloud. “These are the companies that need to save money on infrastructure costs the most,” he says.

The mid-market and enterprise remain cautious about controlling the hardware and software, but have not ruled out the cloud and see it as a complement to on-premise technology, according to the survey Microsoft Free MCTS Training and MCTS Online Training.

This comment from one respondent suggests as much:

“I don’t foresee the cloud as replacing the traditional use model we have now, but rather augmenting it. The cloud is a way to share data across many devices, enabling a user to work anywhere at any time in the most efficient manner. It doesn’t replace the need for high performing, well designed, and low latency local applications and end user support.”

As for the immediate future of the cloud, it will evolve as small companies turn into big ones and compliance regulations slowly adapt to the cloud model, says Baretz. “SMBs will grow and bring with them the cloud services that they started out with.”

In addition to low cloud adoption numbers, the survey revealed another surprise: the acceptance and practice of telecommuting has remained flat over the past two years.

Samsung, Nvidia to demo quad-core Windows 8 tablet

Samsung, Nvidia and Microsoft are on tap to show off a Windows 8 quad core tablet next week.

Nvidia has been bubbling with optimism this week and there may be a good reason for it: The company next week is on tap to demonstrate its quad-core Kal-El chip on a Microsoft Windows 8 tablet.

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We’re hearing in multiple places that a Windows 8 tablet run by Kal-El will make an appearance at the Build conference next week. Samsung, Nvidia and Microsoft will introduce the Windows 8 tablet in a demo. These sources also indicate that a Samsung tablet will be the first Microsoft device with Kal-El. The demonstration would also indicate that Samsung plans to make a Windows 8 tablet. Reports surfaced in the Korea Economic Daily.

What’s unclear is when this Windows 8-Kal-El creation will be publicly available. Our sources are touting the first Microsoft tablet with Kal-El, but the timing doesn’t quite add up. Kal-El will be released in the third quarter, but Windows 8 won’t be released to manufacturing until April 2012 at the earliest.

Windows 8 bits are expected to be handed out to developers next week.

Given those moving parts, it’s likely that Kal-El will power the demo Windows 8 unit to be claimed as a first. But Nvidia’s quad core chip will run on Android in a tablet you can actually buy later this year. As Mary Jo Foley noted, Microsoft showed off a quad-core Windows slate at TechEd New Zealand last month.

Another option is that a Windows 7 tablet will be handed to developers at Build, but it can be upgraded to Windows 8.

Add it up and Nvidia’s optimism this week—the company upped its fiscal 2013 outlook and CEO Jen-Hsun Huang has been confident—may be warranted because it’s betting on two tablet horses in Android and Windows 8.

A few points to note:

If Samsung is on the Windows 8 tablet bandwagon it offer some serious Android diversification. Given Samsung’s patent lawsuits with Apple, a Microsoft option could deliver returns just based on legal costs.
Nvidia’s plan to trump Qualcomm on quad-core market share may rest with Microsoft. Analysts have been skeptical about Nvidia’s optimism largely because Android tablets haven’t become consumer hits. If Nvidia has all of its non-iPad bases covered its goal to have 70 percent market share in non-Apple tablets looks more realistic.

TechRepublic’s Jason Hiner, Mary Jo Foley and ZDNet UK’s Rupert Goodwins contributed to this report.

More Nvidia:

Nvidia’s Tegra weak spot: An assumption Android tablets take off
CNET: Nvidia CEO sees tenfold growth in mobile-chip biz

Build previews:

Let’s help Microsoft name Windows 8
Hyper-V to be in Windows 8 client, Microsoft acknowledges officially
Ten watchwords for Microsoft’s Windows 8 conference
Microsoft’s Windows chief: Media Center will be part of Windows 8
Intel: We’ll win our fair share vs. ARM even with Windows 8
CNET: Samsung to show off Windows 8 tablet, report says