Amazon Web Services remains the top IaaS public cloud computing
provider, offering the widest breath of services of any vendor in the
market, Gartner concluded in its annual Magic Quadrant report.
In
addition to having a broad range of cloud-based services, AWS also has
the largest capacity to handle cloud-based workloads. Its cloud
operation is estimated by Gartner to be five times larger than a dozen
of its top competitors in the market combined. "AWS is the overwhelming
market share leader," the report reads. "It is a thought leader; it is
extraordinarily innovative, exceptionally agile and very responsive to
the market. It has the richest IaaS product portfolio, and is
constantly expanding its service offerings and reducing its prices."
Each
year Gartner compiles its Magic Quadrant for public cloud vendors by
examining the estimated 15 largest market players based on estimated
market share, then it ranks them based on their understanding of market
needs and the company's ability to execute.
In addition to the
breadth and depth of services, AWS also has a robust partner ecosystem
with leading technology providers offering its services through
Amazon's cloud, including some of the biggest systems integrators.
Gartner does warn of some cautions when using AWS services though,
including complexity around its pricing and support offerings.
Individual AWS offerings are rarely bundled, which can complicate
purchasing choices.
No other company is really close to Amazon in
terms of its offerings, according to Gartner, but there are a variety
of niche players. Outsourcer CSC, for example, receives high marks in
the report and is named as the only other leader in the market. Based
on VMware's suite of cloud computing offerings, CSC has a very
different enterprise-focused model compared to Amazon though, Gartner
says. "(CSC) has a solid platform that is attractive to traditional IT
operations organizations that still want to retain control, but need to
offer greater agility to the business and are willing to embrace data
center transformation," Gartner says. Amazon, in comparison is more of
an out-sourcing play, with a limited on-premises or "private cloud"
option for customers to deploy on their own premises.
Microsoft
and Rackspace are listed in the "visionaries" category, while
telco-oriented providers Verizon Terremark and Savvis are in the
"challengers" quadrant, along with Dimension Data. Joyent, Tier 3,
Virtustream, Fujitsu, SoftLayer (now owned by IBM), GoGrid, HP and IBM
are considered "niche players" by Gartner.
The IaaS market for cloud computing is
rapidly evolving, but it represents the fastest-growing need among
Gartner clients. "As each provider has unique offerings, the task of
sourcing their services must be handled with care." Most of the vendors
included have Service-Level Agreements (SLA) that ensure the cloud
will have 99.95% uptime -- some even guarantee up to 99.999%.
Gartner
warns that security remains a major issue with cloud computing, with
the extent of security measures from each provider varying
significantly. While a vendor may provide some base-level of security,
in many circumstances -- such as with AWS -- it's up to the customer to
select what additional security features they want. The same is
generally true with enterprise-class support, which is offered as an
option for customers if they choose from many providers, like AWS.
Customers
are using the cloud for more complex workloads now compared to a year
ago. Gartner recommends using cloud services for purposes such as test
and development, hosting cloud-native applications, e-business hosting,
enterprise applications, general business applications and batch
computing – depending on the provider.
Senior Writer Brandon Butler covers cloud computing for Network World and NetworkWorld.com.
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