Fundamentals of Cloud Computing: Platform-as-a-Service

“If you are waiting until the market settles before making decisions, you are going to be waiting a long, long time.” (According to DLT’s CTO Van Ristau, in a recent Platform-as-a-Service webcast) Gartner, a third party analyst of the IT market, published a statement that by the end of 2011, the battle for leadership in Platform-as-a-Service and key PaaS segments will engulf the software industry. This particular segment of the cloud computing is moving very fast and there is a lot of competition- always a healthy thing for end users. Cloud providers are constantly delivering new or expanded PaaS offerings, and the market doesn’t seem to be settling anytime soon. If you are considering adopting a PaaS strategy, it is time to investigate the different offerings available, get your development teams involved, and begin using these services. Of course, by the time all of that happens in your agency, solutions offerings may have changed again! But, it’s better to figure out what you want, what you need and what’s out there in the market. (Slide from PaaS webcast showcasing different vendor choices) The webcasts, presented by DLT’s Cloud Advisory Group, were presented as vendor-neutral discussions, with branded vendors used only as examples to show what is out there rather than provide a picture of what might be available on a particular vendor’s website. One model Van examined is DOD’s Forge.mil.  DOD has been a prominent player with respect to PaaS offerings. The objective of Forge.mil is to provide a secure collaborative development environment for DOD.  It began with the development of an infrastructure called Rapid Access Computing Environment on which they currently offer Red Hat and Linux, Windows servers, and content delivery service for the DOD global information grid using Akamai services.  Red Hat offers multiple types of PaaS offerings- for more insight, check out what DLT’s Matt Micene has to say! Forge.mil includes features like a developer’s toolkit, access to open sources and community source software, standardized version control, bug tracking, integrated testing, certification and accreditation for security applications. It provides users with cross-program collaboration for sharing experiences, problems, and solutions.  The access to Forge.mil is restricted to military, duty civilians and contractors to DOD who are authorized to use it. If you are in a reasonably sized agency or state organization, you might want to think about Forge.mil as sort of a model at large for PaaS and standardization in large organizations. (Slide from PaaS webcast showing Forge.mil example) Register today to view webcasts with more information about Platform-as-a-Service and the Fundamentals of Cloud Computung!