Smartial Wayback Machine Text Extractor



Live version of this page exists.
However, it is different from the archived page (2 redirect/s found...)


This article contains 672 words.

The Cloud | Web Directions

The Cloud

  • About the Survey
  • The Audience
  • Operating Systems and Browsers
  • Markup
  • CSS and Presentation
  • JavaScript and the DOM
  • Rich Media
  • Server tech­nolo­gies
  • The Cloud
  • Conclusions and predictions

While ser­vices like Amazon’s S3 and EC2 have been around for some time, the rise of both the neb­u­lous (sorry) term “cloud com­put­ing”, and var­i­ous cloud based ser­vices and plat­forms in the last cou­ple of years has been one of the most sig­nif­i­cant devel­op­ments on the web land­scape. For the first time in this sur­vey we asked a num­ber of ques­tions in an attempt to get a sense of the extent to which respon­dents are rely­ing on cloud based plat­forms, infra­struc­ture and services.

First, we asked respon­dents whether they ‘rely on “Cloud Computing” resources?’. A sur­pris­ingly large 22% responded that they did.

Do you rely on “Cloud Computing” resources?

2010
AnswerCount%Yes (49c1)31222.25%No (49c2)92265.76%

We fol­lowed up by ask­ing what par­tic­u­lar type of cloud resources they use. We offered three choices (respon­dents could choose more than one response). The sim­plest, and arguably most long stand­ing cloud-​​based resource, stor­age, such as Amazon’s S3, accounted for the high­est response, at nearly 17%. “Infrastructure as a ser­vice” (for exam­ple Amazon’s Elastic Cloud 2 (EC2) or Rackspace Cloud ser­vice), was nom­i­nated by 10% of respon­dents. Platforms as a ser­vice, such as Google’s AppEngine are used by 7% of respondents.

If so, what do you use the cloud for?

2010
AnswerCount%Infrastructure as a ser­vice (e.g. Amazon EC2)14410.27%Platform as a ser­vice (E.g. Google App Engine)1037.35%Online stor­age (e.g. Amazon S3)23316.62%

Lastly, we asked respon­dents to tell us which par­tic­u­lar ser­vices they were using. We gave respon­dents a choice of some of the most well known ser­vices, as well as the oppor­tu­nity to let us know which other ser­vices they used. Perhaps not sur­pris­ingly, as they are the most well estab­lished, Amazon’s EC2 and S3 were the most widely used, with more than 13% of all respon­dents to the sur­vey say­ing that they use S3. Google’s AppEngine, while cur­rently only sup­port­ing appli­ca­tions writ­ten with Python and Java, is used by nearly 6% of all respon­dents. While not an option for respon­dents to choose, 2.3% of respon­dents men­tioned using RackspaceCloud servers, which most likely some­what under­states the per­cent­age using this ser­vice. Microsoft’s Azure plat­form was only com­mer­cially avail­able from the first day of our sur­vey period (February 1st), was still used by around the same num­ber of respon­dents than some much more long stand­ing ser­vices as Heroku and Joyent.

What cloud ser­vices do you use?

2010
AnswerCount%Amazon EC2946.7%Amazon S319013.55%Google App Engine805.71%Windows Azure70.5%RackspaceCloud322.3%Heroku80.57%Joyent80.57%Bungee10.07%Other755.35%

This is an area where hype is some­what reflected in devel­oper prac­tice. WE’ll con­tinue to keep an eye on how devel­op­ers use cloud ased ser­vices in future sur­veys, and expect a fur­ther uptake in com­ing years.

Next

We’ll wrap up by mak­ing some over­all obser­va­tions and com­par­isons with the pre­vi­ous sur­vey, and go out on a limb with some pre­dic­tions for tech­nol­ogy trends in web design and devel­op­ment in 2010.




Please close this window manually.