The WTF Series: The Cloud
August 27, 2015 | Ben Kittrell
On a daily basis, Ben Kittrell translates the jargon-filled world of technology for clients of his tech consultancy. The Words that Frustrate (WTF) series aims to offer readers some clarity in an industry dominated by techies’ confusing argot.
When most people think of the Internet, they think of websites. But it’s actually much more than that.
Emails, file transfers and other types of traffic are part of the Internet but technically fall outside of the World Wide Web. The same goes for mobile applications, which do not fall under the Web umbrella but use the Internet for communication, data storage and more.
If this sounds like a boring semantic argument, then congratulations, you now understand the cloud. It’s just a word — a label for a subset of Internet services that are used by web, mobile and desktop applications.
What about cloud computing?
Ten years ago, if you wanted to host a web application you would most likely have to go buy a computer and install it in a data center where you rented space. It was your responsibility to support and maintain that server and you were paying for it whether you were using it or not.
At some point Amazon decided to take everything they’ve learned about hosting the country’s largest online retail store and create services that everyone else can use called Amazon Web Services or AWS. The company maintains the physical infrastructure and lets its customer create on-demand virtual servers in “the cloud.” While there are many benefits to cloud computing, essentially it’s about commoditizing computation in a way that lowers cost and reduces overhead.
Now, according to a 2105 study by RightScale, 93 percent of the companies they surveyed are currently using cloud services.
Is the cloud secure?
Cloud services like AWS run in the most secure data centers on the planet. The physical and network security goes well beyond most enterprise companies. Not only that, most hackers don’t target data centers — they target you. It’s much easier to trick someone into giving you a password than breaking into a Tier 4 data center.
You may have heard about the Apple iCloud fiasco in January where some accounts where hacked, including some celebrities with risqué photos. This raised a lot of concerns about security, but was this really the cloud’s fault?
The hackers used a method called “brute-force” which is older than the cloud or probably the Internet itself. They wrote a program to try millions of combinations of passwords until one of them worked. Normally, this tactic is thwarted by limiting the number of times someone can try a password, but Apple failed to properly address this. So in reality, the cloud is no less secure than any other networked, server-based platform. It’s only as secure as you make it.
What’s the future of the cloud?
Amazon Web Services chief product ec2 (Elastic Cloud Computing) is essentially a way to create a virtual server in the cloud that behaves the same as a physical server would in your own datacenter. This is called “Infrastructure as a Service” (IaaS). It provides the infrastructure, and you create the virtual servers. If you have a Java web application, there is still a considerable amount of work needed to get the server ready to run it.
Other services — like Heroku and Amazon’s own Elastic Beanstalk — take care of all of the specifics of hosting a Java, Ruby or Node.js type of application. You provide the app and they provide the rest. This is called Platform as a Service (PaaS) and is the direction the industry is going. More and more you’re seeing cloud-computing providers create specialized services for sending email, transcoding video, hosting applications, etc.
Ben Kittrell is the co-founder of Doodlekit and an advisor for startups and small businesses. Kittrell also is host of Spare Room Radio, a podcast that features Kansas City entrepreneurs.

2015 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Tesseract pairs one-button robotic badge with real-time, multi-industry workforce tracking
A new site management platform — complete with wearable robots designed to automatically document work as it happens — is expected to help construction, infrastructure, and military teams gain real-time clarity across their projects and workforce, said John Boucard. “Instead of relying on spreadsheets, manual reporting, or guesswork, leaders now have continuous visual and sensor…
LISTEN: KoraLabs connects AI to the field, helping agtech grow a more sustainable future
On this episode of our 12-part Plug and Play Topeka podcast series, we speak with Luca Corinzia of KoraLabs — an agtech pioneer based in Switzerland that’s bridging the gap between scattered farm data and actionable insights. KoraLabs’ AI-driven “digital twin” platform integrates field data, satellite imagery, soil and weather models to help agronomists and…
10 top event picks for GEWKC; build your own schedule from 60+ sessions
With dozens of events on the calendar for GEWKC, Union Station will be bustling with activity, said Callie England, noting organizers intentionally curated a week where attendees can’t go wrong — no matter how they fill out their itinerary. “While the schedule can feel full, it’s truly the best of the best,” said England, director of…
How AI changes the the founder code: ‘This is all moving faster than anyone expected’
New tech opportunities — like artificial intelligence — hold the potential to equalize the Kansas City region among more established startup hubs, investment leaders said Thursday, but to fully take advantage, entrepreneurs who want strong, lasting companies must have a fire inside them. Not to mention grit. “Several really incredible entrepreneurs said, ‘I think the one…

