123 lines
9.0 KiB
Plaintext
123 lines
9.0 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 635
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Title: HPR0635: Cloudy Predictions
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0635/hpr0635.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 00:13:13
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---
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music
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Hello, this is Dismal Science reporting for the first time to hacker public radio.
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I want to release a series of casts mostly concerning topics on economics and open source
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software.
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It's something that I think a lot of us don't think about enough.
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Really what are the incentives behind what goes on?
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Just a little bit about myself.
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I'm a long time Linux user going on about a decade.
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Debian is my poison of choice.
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I actually don't use any Windows oriented software and I probably also won't take a job.
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Unless I'm allowed to use Linux.
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Why?
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Because to keep things abrupt, not using Linux is just not very intelligent.
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And I'll probably release another audio cast on that at some point.
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But what I really want to talk about today is the concept of cloud computing,
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particularly externally hosted outsourced cloud computing solutions.
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And why this might not be the best choice for you or your company or your
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church or organization to really adopt this new model.
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First of all, let's try to get some type of definition of what we're talking about.
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In my case, what was the first cloud product I used that was external?
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Hotmail.
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My first email address with a Hotmail account.
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And the ironic part about it is that you really don't own any part of that account.
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Really, it's implied that you do, but you don't.
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I sense of change should 20 different email addresses and I didn't own any of them.
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Until a few years ago when I actually bought my domain name.
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Yes, if you decide to leave Hotmail, you're at hotmail.com address belongs to Hotmail.
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You're not guaranteed a way to export or migrate any of the services associated with that account.
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And there's no guarantee that they have to even continue offering it.
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Let me give you another example.
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Years ago, I had an e-trade account and at the time,
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e-trade thought it was a good idea to incorporate email into their service.
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I was a big e-trade user at the time and thought that that would be so convenient to use
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e-trade email along with their stock trading platform.
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One day, when I went to log into my e-trade account, the email option was just gone.
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Just literally gone.
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And, you know, I called e-trade about it and really the customer service people didn't even know
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that e-trade offered an e-mail option.
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Somebody made a decision one day that the service was going to not exist and I had to migrate abruptly.
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Let's look at another situation.
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Let's look at delicious, the recent delicious controversy.
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Delicious was a company that had a fairly promising product, this social bookmarking concept.
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I actually got my mother onto it because she needed an effective way to manage her bookmarks
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as I kept reformatting computers, destroying the bookmark saved in Firefox.
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She needed to have a way to manage this and she managed it through the cloud on somebody else's
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servers and who is somebody else's permission.
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Well, delicious was a fairly reasonable service.
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Yahoo bought them and abruptly stopped investing in them.
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If you look at the delicious website, it hasn't updated in years.
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But more relevant is the fact that delicious is no longer going to be a service.
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Yahoo executives have determined that delicious is not a valuable property and will be sold or
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dismantled along with all of the accounts and settings and configuration that its users might
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have contributed to over the years. These are simple examples, right? We just keep hopping from
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services to services because really that's what we've been trained to do.
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One of the more dangerous situations, and I'm a big Google fan. I think Google has done
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tremendously good work. Their products are very well engineered.
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But we're beginning the process of depending on Google in the same kind of fashion.
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Now we're going to migrate our delicious bookmarks to Google bookmarks and the hope that they
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are going to maintain all of the various services that they are giving us for free in many cases.
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These services are not free to deliver. Of course, my whole rant follows a parallel of what Richard
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Stallman has been talking about. None of this stuff is free. Google has infrastructure all over the
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world, real estate and computer systems, electricity costs to deliver all of these
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reader products and mail products to you. And really, Google has been good about it because
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they are flush with money right now. Will they be flush with money in a few years? We don't know.
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Once upon a time, Yahoo was flush with money, and that's certainly not the case today.
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I wish Google the best, but we cannot really be guaranteed that Google is going to always have
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as much resources as they have today. So, what am I really ultimately saying is
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for businesses who want to now move to cloud computing, you've got a similar problem. Cloud storage,
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cloud ticketing systems, cloud, wikis. I saw a product that I thought was pretty cool. I went
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to Atlassian's website. Atlassian is a software company from Australia. They make a number of
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nifty tools. If you're too lazy to actually install their software, they now have a cloud solution
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where you can sign up for account and they will host their software for you, just in case you don't
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want to administer machines or install software. Well, is that a good idea? Maybe it's a cool kind of,
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but in reality, you're completely at the Beckin Wim of Atlassian. We know, by the nature of
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economic cycles, that the fortunes of all of these companies go up and down with time, and
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do you really want to be stuck having some essential service effectively outsourced
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and have to be in a position where you have to migrate rapidly to yet another solution that
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you really don't control. By now, you're probably asking yourself, why am I listening to this guy?
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What is he actually saying? Get to the point. Well, let me get to the point.
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The point is what I'm telling you guys is you really need to consider running your own cloud.
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Cloud computing is good, but you have to control it. Run your own cloud. This is not hard.
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I am a person of medium technical capacity, so I mean, if I can do it, most of you guys can do it.
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If you need technical services, if you find services are becoming valuable to you,
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host them yourself. Give me an example. Looking now to migrate from delicious, I have realized there
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are many great open source replicas of delicious that you can host yourself. I'll talk about one
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today. It's called insipid, and it is a solution that runs like a common lamp stack written in
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pearl. You can use it with mySQL or Postgres, but effectively, you can run your own bookmarking
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service. To me, this is really important because the web is huge and we do not want to lose
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our place when bookmarking. We want to remember that tutorial that we thought was so good.
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We want to remember that ranking or that newspaper article that we thought was so good so that we
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can reference it. Insipid allows you to do this, and not only that, it comes, the creators of
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insipid have created a Firefox plugin in case Firefox is your browser of choice. So you can really
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use this insipid service exactly like a delicious service, and you will never need to migrate again.
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You can migrate if you want to migrate, but you will not be forced to migrate and hidden fees or
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charges will never show up to your doorstep. Ultimately, all of these cloud providers are going to
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have to start charging somehow, just like delicious. Delicious could not continue to be a business
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model or business line without revenues. I mean, there were engineers employed to deliver this,
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and goodwill can only go so far. Really, what we need to do is back the strong open source projects
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and effectively do most of what we need ourselves. This economic cycle is going to prove a lot of
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things. By the time we're done with this depression or recession or whatever they call it, we're going
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to find companies treating us in a very more harsh kind of fashion. The days I'm predicting that
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the days of companies giving away a lot of free services, particularly ones that continuously
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cost them money, like hosting your free accounts, those days are probably not going to continue.
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That's just a prediction of mine I could be wrong, but I'm thinking that a lot of these
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services are going to start converting to more for cost service, or they're just going to disappear.
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I'll give you an example, Hotmail. That one might not be around too much longer. Hotmail,
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I just heard on the news that they lost some number of accounts. I just don't know how
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interested Microsoft is investing in Hotmail. It's not hot anymore.
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This is more or less the conclusion to this audio cast. Let me know what you thought.
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You can reach me at dismal.science.hpr at gmail.com. Once again, that's dismal.science.hpr at gmail.com.
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Dismal.science is going to be my name going forward as it refers to the economic nature of the
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cast that I will be producing. Thanks again, and thank you, Ken, for keeping this hacker public
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radio effort going strong.
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Thank you for listening to Hack with Public Radio. HPR is sponsored by caro.net.
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So head on over to C-A-R-O dot-E-T for all of us in need.
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