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This isn't a device, it's a service

ITworld 11/27/2007

Sean McGrath, ITworld.com

Ten years ago - heck, maybe even just five years ago - if I tried to rent you a word processor package you would have laughed at me. Why on earth would you rent something that you can buy and own outright for a reasonably small amount of money?

Well. Keep going backwards in time. Back through the mini-computers and the mainframes. As you move back in time, rental of computer technology services makes up a bigger and bigger part of the (admittedly smaller) overall IT landscape. I remember working for a company that rented - yes rented - time on a mainframe computer in order to run its monthly payroll. I remember working for a company that developed and marketed financial trading systems in the City of London. The system was not available for sale - customers could rent it but not buy it. Monthly fee, minimum one year contract. That sort of thing.

On this topic

Wind the clock forward to today and rental-based IT services are re-emerging and taking up a bigger part of what is now, a much larger overall landscape. In some respects, an analogy with the past works just fine. Things that are complex and expensive and non-core can be outsourced via the magic of modern communications technology. We have a new acronym for it : SaaS - Software as a Service[1]. Do you need a virtual office while on the road? Would it be cost-effective to just rent your sales force automation? How about an employee performance management solution?

In other areas of the rental landscape, there is no direct analogy with the past. All around us, a new class of IT service is spreading like wildfire. Services that do not make sense to use "offline" in your own closed environment. Services that rely on connecting to markets or connecting to vast repositories of information. Strangely perhaps, commodity activities like word processing are partly in that camp. Why use a completely private word processing setup to write something that you are then going to make public? Why not write it directly on the Web?

The big growth area for rental-based IT is the sector that involves connectivity to big repositories of information or big networks of other users. The obvious example is the way we rent - rather than buy - cellular telephony. The cell phone is just the gadget, it is of little use unless we can connect to the networks. We happily rent rather than buy that capability. As time marches forward, the venerable PC - for so long the container of purchased services - is becoming more "just the gadget" that connects us to our rented services that live out there on the networks.

Also, as time goes by the PC-as-uber-gadget concept is being challenged. Cell phones are becoming amazingly powerful devices. Of critical interest to vendors of services is that cell phones have built-in mechanisms for handling large volumes of small payments. Simply put, cellphones are SaaS-enabled from a business model perspective. PCs are not.

The cellphone will not have a free ride to the top of the SaaS gadget hill however. Take Amazon's new eBook reader for example[2]. Clearly we can read digital books on PCs, on cellphones or on dedicated eBook readers. Where will our wallets take us?

It is too early to say but one thing is abundantly clear I think. The emphasis in the industry is shifting from software/hardware as something to be owned and cherished and capitalized and depreciated to software/hardware as something to be consumed and rented and thrown out over time.

Reading through the blogsphere's coverage of the launch of Amazon's Kindle eBook device, one comment struck me above all others. Werner Vogel's, CTO of Amazon:

"This isn't a device, it's a service."[3]

Indeed.


[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Software_as_a_Service
[2] http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000FI73MA
[3] http://www.allthingsdistributed.com/2007/11/breaking_through_physical_boundaries.html

Sean McGrath is CTO of Propylon. He is an internationally acknowledged authority on XML and related standards. He served as an invited expert to the W3C's Expert Group that defined XML in 1998. He is the author of three books on markup languages published by Prentice Hall. Visit his site at: http://seanmcgrath.blogspot.com.

Read more of Sean McGrath's ITworld.com columns here.




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