This week I had the distinct pleasure of joining a panel of cloud industry experts for the AFCEA Belvoir Industry Days conference at Washington National Harbor’s Gaylord Resort to discuss the hot topics of cloud computing in front of hundreds of attendees representing several federal agencies (notably the US Army).  The panel was moderated by GSA CIO, Casey Coleman, and included experts representing Lockheed MartinCSCOcto Consulting Groupand — best of all — VMware (i.e. yours truly).  linked are the BIO’s for each posted on the AFCEA Belvoir website.

To kick things off, each panelist had 5 minutes for opening remarks and to provide some insight on their organization’s perspective on cloud…call it a 5-minute elevator pitch.  For my part, I shared VMware’s cloud vision of transforming IT as we know it and the journey through this transformation — an approach to cloud that is broken up into three measurable stages:
  1. IT Production – early stage virtualization to reach new infrastructure and cost efficiencies.
  2. Business Production – realizing the value of all that is gained by virtualizing “low hanging” applications in stage 1 — increased availability and performance, app agility, centralized management, etc — to drive the virtualization of business critical applications while setting a solid foundation for cloud computing.
  3. IT as a Service (ITaaS) – reaping the benefits of the first two stages and laying down the framework of a modern cloud architecture, which ultimately leads to to business agility.
Here I am going through my customer journey opening (from the AFCEA Belvoir Chapter photo gallery — ©2007 Federal Business Council, Inc.)
AFCEA Cloud Panel 4.jpg
The first panel question was teed up by Ms. Coleman, which was enough to fuel additional questions by the 300+ audience for the remainder of the 1-hr session.  After each panelist shared their thoughts on each of the questions, I couldn’t help but notice the recurring theme: Security and Compliance in the cloud.  The panel shared several views and opinions on this often-touchy topic.  Here are a few highlights of these and other important questions along with my response (not necessarily in this order and all paraphrased of course)…
Q: How will I know my agency is ready for cloud?
A: Does IT and business agility intrigue you?  Understanding the industry-accepted characteristics of cloud — pooling, elasticity, automation, self-service, etc. (see: NIST) — and all that it promises will often trigger a need to move along on the journey.  But agencies are approaching the journey in many different ways. Some are eager to achieve the goal of business agility — and quickly ramping up to get there — while others are simply following the guidelines of the Vivek Kundra’s cloud first mandate but struggling to lay down the ground work to get there.  Regardless of why you need/want cloud, how prepared your agency is will make the journey affordable, achievable, and worth-while.
Q: How do I evolve from traditional IT to IT as a Service and the cloud?
A: First and foremost, setting a solid foundation of the cloud — just like you would for a house — is a critical first step (resource pooling: a key prerequisite) in the journey.  For VMware’s customers, that means achieving high levels of virtualization and efficiencies through vSphere.  For any organization that is stuck in the IT Production phase (20-30% virtualized), that means taking the necessary steps to moving to the Business Production phase and increase those levels of virtualization to 60% or greater on an optimized virtual infrastructure.
Q: How is compliance and security addressed in the cloud?
A: We first have to understand what changes as we shift from static workloads protected by physical perimeter security devices to an environment where they are run virtually on shared infrastructure — possibly across multiple datacenters — and free to be elastic, portable, and dynamic.  This shift requires a fundamentally new approach.  From a VMware perspective, security and compliance are addressed using a set of technologies and management tools to provide end-to-end compliance and security in depth.  This includes the ability to provide dynamic network segmentation and protection in the cloud; providing secure multi-tenancy through frameworks and adaptive [virtual] security devices built for this era; a governance model that makes sense of all actions (and interactions); and a compliance and control engine that address these issues within a single workload or entire clouds at a time.  Only with these tools and tight integration with the surrounding frameworks can you provide a level of compliance for workloads small and big, connected or not, and still be able to deliver all that we drive to achieve in the cloud.
Q: Workload portability is critical — how is this achieved in the cloud?
A: We’re constantly referring to the need for elasticity and portability in the cloud.  These terms are referring to the ability to move workloads been cloud infrastructures for reasons including capacity, performance, security, availability, cost, and other business factors.  VMware addresses these key characteristics by implementing technologies that allow a cloud user to shift workloads across cloud infrastructures — between any combination of private, public, or traditional virtualized environments — and achieve true Hybrid cloud capabilities.  With these tools at their fingertips, consumers are presented with a “single pane of glass” interface that allows them to move and manipulate workloads across all vCloud-powered clouds for whatever the purpose.
Q: How about cloud interoperability?
A: Interoperability is key.  Most agencies that dive into the realm of all things cloud quickly realize that not all clouds are made equal — from from it!  This can be a big problem — the journey to cloud doesn’t have to be polluted with warning signs and speed bumps.  VMware spear-headed the Open Virtualization Framework (OVF) which has received industry-wide acceptance, is an ANSI standard for portability, and is supported by several partners and competitors alike.  With OVF, customers are able to import/export workloads and associated meta data to/from a variety of virtualization and cloud platforms.  VMware is also a big believer in open API’s — vCloud API’s in this case — to enable streamlined management and control of workloads across clouds.  VMware uses these technologies natively to enable portability across vClouds (pub/priv/hybrid) and to/from vSphere environments.  This means that your on-premise private vCloud will deliver interoperability with vCloud-powered service providers and allow you to deploy, run, manage, and secure workloads across these common frameworks.
** There are gotchas — understand that the objective here is to provide a means of moving your applications based on the requirements of the business or the unique characteristics of a given application.  Interoperability needs to be a two-way (at least) road…beware of the service providers that are happy to receive (import) an OVF workload but not give you the tools to get it back.  We call this the “Hotel California” model.  When all sources and destinations provide a common set of frameworks and API’s, this issue goes away and streamlined management ensues.
I certainly enjoyed learning the position of each panelist — many common approaches but not always the case, which keeps it interesting!  All in all, the audience questions were great, the panelists were often in sync, and we all demonstrated a [mostly] unified approach to the cloud journey.
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@virtualjad