Cloud computing's big debt to NASA
IBM is betting big on OpenStack, deeply rooted in the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's ingenuity
Computerworld - IBM's announcement this week that it would base its cloud services on OpenStack may help establish the open-source platform as the standard in enterprises.
IBM along with Hewlett-Packard, Dell, Cisco, Red Hat and Rackspace, which helped developed the platform, are supporting OpenStack.
This means that just about every Fortune 1000 company will be using vendors that are building products and services based on the OpenStack-based cloud platform. Considering that OpenStack is less than three years old, this may be remarkable.
The rapid rise of OpenStack may not have happened without NASA. That may be worth noting, especially in a time of government sequesters, budget cutting and retreats on R&D spending.
The government has played a crucial role in the development of many technologies and platforms, including GPS, lasers and the Internet, to name a few.
OpenStack's beginnings occurred when NASA started a project called Nebula, in what became a cloud management platform. It released compute engine code as open source under an Apache 2.0 license, which drew attention from Rackspace. The vendor had developed a storage cloud called Swift.
Rackspace and NASA combined what turned out to be complementary development efforts and created OpenStack, releasing it in the summer of 2010 as an open source cloud platform.
Chris Kemp, the first CTO for IT at NASA and the leader of the Nebula effort, said that something like OpenStack would have emerged without NASA, but the agency accelerated it "and gave it a lot more credibility quickly."
John Engates, the CTO of Rackspace, agreed, saying: "NASA lent a lot of credibility when it came to this being a truly open and altruistic effort rather than a Rackspace-centric effort with some ulterior motive."
People joining the community needed to feel confident that the project was not all for Rackspace," he said. "NASA made sure it was for everyone."
Kemp left NASA to establish a Silicon Valley startup, Nebula, to work with companies deploying private cloud infrastructures. It has been joined by a number of NASA engineers who worked on OpenStack.
Kemp sees the OpenStack effort and the transferring of the technology to the private sector in keeping with NASA's mission "of exploring the solar system for the benefit of mankind," he said.
"If it were not for NASA, OpenStack would not exist," said Linda Cureton, NASA's CIO.
Nebula was attractive because it's flexible, scalable and secure, and beneficial to NASA missions for its ability to start small and scale fast, Cureton said. She said Kemp gave birth to Nebula and said she is "pleased to have been a 'midwife' to its birth."
OpenStack-based clouds may be seen as a rival to Amazon's cloud, so when Amazon announced last year that NASA moved some work to its platform, the decision raised some eyebrows.
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