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By Phil Wainewright November 5, 2002 Seven years ago this month, Lou Gerstner, then CEO and chairman of IBM, stood up to give the opening keynote at Comdex, the huge annual tradeshow of the U.S. computer industry. It had been an exciting year: Sun had introduced the platform-independent Java programming language, Netscape had completed its record-breaking $2.6 billion Nasdaq IPO, and everyone was fired up about the potential of the Internet and the WorldWide Web. Gerstner's speech brought the full weight of IBM behind a concept that had already been floated by the CEOs of lesser companies including Sun, Oracle and Netscape. The industry, he said, was about to move beyond client-server and enter a phase of "network-centric computing," driven by powerful networking technologies. "In a truly networked world, we can share computational power, combine it and leverage it," he said. "This world will reshape our notions of computing and, in particular, our notions of the PC."
We've Come a Long Way, Big Blue Instead of Gerstner promoting more powerful networks to transfer knowledge between incompatible computer systems, Palmisano envisions a shared, networked systems infrastructure that enables real-time process integration across disparate applications. All of us have shared that seven-year journey. Gerstner's 1995 Comdex keynote effectively summed up the aspirations of the industry at the time. It seemed to validate many of the innovations that had been forming in people's minds in that momentous year, in particular those of many ASP pioneers. Unfortunately, there were many false assumptions behind those 1995 ideas, in particular the notion that networking meant sucking everything up into the center. "If the communications link between the PC and the network is cheap enough, fast enough and has virtually unlimited bandwidth," Gerstner suggested, "why not migrate a lot of the functions that currently reside inside the PC to the network the applications, the data, the storage, and even some of the processing?"
The Power of the Grid IBM's shift of emphasis from "network-centric" in 1995 to "on-demand" in 2002 reflects that growing realization. But being in tune with current thinking still doesn't mean that IBM has all the solutions. In 1995, Gerstner cited just three products as examples of how IBM expected to fulfill his vision of network-centric computing. They were ATM networking, the planned network appliance and Lotus Notes none of which turned out to be pivotal to the execution of the vision. Conceived at a time when client-server was still the dominant computing model, they were imbued with a flawed view of networked computing that saw just two tiers, the edge and the center.
IBM Stuck on Being the Center It's hardly surprising that the company that once dominated the market for "big iron" mainframes should still want to be the main provider of its customer's computing power. But enterprises that want to exploit the full potential of on-demand computing should remain wary of locking themselves into Big Blue's Big Grid.
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