It'll be fascinating to determine who indicators on towards the Open Cloud Manifesto document that is circulating privately before the unveiling on March thirty.Update (March thirty): The listing of Open Cloud Manifesto backers is ultimate. Neither Google nor Salesforce is about the listing.Microsoft has created it apparent that it's no intentions of backing the “secret document.” Now Amazon has said publicly that it isn;t planning to throw its weight behind the Manifesto, either.My ZDNet blogging colleague Larry Dignan has posted Amazon;s statement. The synopsis: We already have a real, live cloud platform that developers are using and we;re not going to rejigger it to comply with some cloudy set of standards.Microsoft said earlier this week that it didn;t like the “sign on the dotted line or else” nature of the proposed Manifesto. I;m curious whether there are specific provisions in the draft that the Softies have seen got their hackles up. I guessed it;s probably the use of “open” in some way that Microsoft fears could be used against the company…. Microsoft officials have declined to provide any more details so far.Data Center Knowledge has the clearest explanation I;ve seen so far as to what;s going on behind the scenes in the cloud-standards backroom politics.Update No. 1: Here;s the actual Manifesto, for your reading pleasure.Update No. 2: Directions on Microsoft researcher Matt Rosoff weighs in:“In general,
Microsoft Office 2010 32bit Key, when organizations that consist primarily of for-profit
companies talk about ‘openness; and ;standards,; I am suspicious of
their real motives. Moreover,
Microsoft Office Pro Plus 2010, there;s no crystal clear definition of the word
‘open,
Office Standard 2010 Activation,; and even the term ‘cloud computing; is unclear. Amazon already
has an active business selling cloud computing services,
Office 2010 Sale, and Microsoft;s
trying to build one. I;m not sure what they;d gain by joining this
consortium.“That said,
Office 2010 Home And Student X64, there;s a valid concern behind all this posturing: if
developers choose to leverage one vendor;s cloud system, it may be hard
to switch later on. That;s nothing new or surprising–it;s the same
situation with on-premise software. The trouble comes if these vendors
don;t take interoperability seriously. It;s important that applications
built on different cloud platforms can communicate and exchange
data–that;s why REST, SOAP, and other Web services are important.”