Cloud Computing. It Starts with End-User Trust.

I stumbled upon a site the other day that posted a recent study by Pew Internet & American Life Project. 

http://www.pewinternet.org/pdfs/PIP_Cloud.Memo.pdf[1]

 

The study states that 69% of Internet users are invoking Cloud Computing applications today, meaning they use some kind of Web-based application like webmail, photo-sharing sites or other Web-based software.

 

Wow, really? 69%? That seems high. But, as you dive into the broad scale adoption of webmail and the proliferation of photo-sharing sites, that number makes more sense.

 

In the study, Ray Ozzie of Microsoft says that cloud computing would enable “a personal mesh of devices – a means by which all of your devices are brought together, managed through the web as a seamless whole.” Sounds pretty good. Anytime, anywhere access to what you want, how you want it.

 

But there was an even more interesting result from the study — only 5% of Internet users are using the Cloud to backup files and their hard-drive online. The majority uses Cloud Computing applications, signaling a need and value, yet only 5% use the Cloud for backup applications? Why is this number so low in the US?

 

The low percentage is certainly not for an absence of solutions. There are bunch of companies out there offering online backup services. Today, you can add another – Qwest. We’ve partnered up with Symantec, a trusted name in computer security, to bring our high-speed Internet customers Qwest Personal Digital Vault™. It’s pretty straight forward: 2GB FREE to all Qwest High-Speed Internet® customers, and there are pay tiers available for those that need more.

 

So, why would Qwest offer a service that seems to be readily available today? I think the real question is; if the solutions are so readily available, why isn’t anyone using them?

 

There’s a great lead-in statement in one of the studies sections: “Cloud users to Providers: let’s keep the data between us.” I think this is the issue. It’s about trust. For online backup to become more mainstream, Internet users have to trust the Cloud and, in turn, move their valuable content into the cloud.

Did we just revolutionize Cloud Computing? Hardly. But, we do believe in it, and we believe that customers trust us, our network and Symantec. With our network and datacenter investments, our ability to support the advancement of Cloud Computing and user adoption is in our wheelhouse.

Today we took another step. I am looking forward to tomorrow.

- Scott Russell

Qwest Product Director 




[1] Horrigan, John. Use of Cloud ComputingApplications and Services. Pew Internet & American Life Project, September,2008, http://www.pewinternet.org/pdfs/PIP_Cloud.Memo.pdf,accessed on Jan. 29, 2009.

 

 

 

Message Edited by Q-MonicaM on 02-03-2009 10:00 AM
Message Edited by Q-ScottR on 02-03-2009 10:06 AM
Message Edited by ProdAdmin on 10-29-2009 04:19 PM
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Qwest Reviews CES Trend: Internet To Power TV

Happy New Year! For some of us, nothing kicks off a new year like the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. This year, we’re excited about the buzz at the event, what it means for the future, for you and for Qwest.

 

One of the big stories we saw at CES this year was the convergence of the Internet and TV and the products that bring the two together.

 

Qwest believes that the Internet is the backbone of this trend. In fact, the New York Times article “To Connect to the Internet, Just Turn on Your TV,” (Jan. 11, 2009) said, “If there was one overarching theme from the Consumer Electronics Show here last week, it was that absolutely every device in our lives is becoming a computer connected to the Internet.”

 

Some of the TV innovations that are incorporating Internet connectivity include:

  • the ability to stream HD movies directly into your home via your Internet connection with embedded movie-rental and download capabilities into TVs;
  • an Internet set-top device that allows viewers to watch online video on their TV screen instead of their computer
  • a device that will let you watch what is on your DVR at home on a computer across the country.

 

As the trend toward Internet and TV integration continues, the same New York Times article predicted that “increasingly what will differentiate one TV from another is the software it runs and the Internet services it connects to.”

 

We agree – and with our Fiber-Optic Fast Internet and reliable network, we believe that Qwest is poised to deliver the Internet experience needed to power these innovations.   

 

Did any online community members attend CES? Where do you see the trends going?

 

- Travis Leo

Product Director, Qwest High-Speed Internet

 

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