I received my latest copy of InformationWeek recently and found this article interesting – especially since all discussions these days seem to center on either Cloud Computing or Agile Development.

 

 

 

 

Skytap is a startup that tabs themselves as the leading provider of cloud-based virtual labs that deliver 100% self-service provisioning of complex IT environments without any architectural changes. Cloud computing is poised to become the defining technology of the 21st century and Skytap’s goal is to make serving up virtual machines over the internet as ubiquitous as delivering html to a browser. They are working to maximize efficiencies, minimize costs, eliminate unnecessary hardware, outsourcing, eco-efficient computing, and doing more with less.

 

 

 

 

I’ve worked many very large-scale government contracts where testing was a massive onsite effort involving additional hardware, software, and bodies in a compressed and stressful timeframe. Cloud-based testing would have made those experiences much more sane. And it was solely my responsibility at the time to make those tests happen and help ensure their success.

 

 

 

 

Likewise, my time in the gaming industry involved load testing for slot data management software. It’s necessary to test slot machines against large loads of usage – the last thing a very large casino gaming entity wants to happen is for their slot system to crash on a Saturday night due to heavy customer usage!

 

 

 

 

Without further ado, here is the article written by Charles Babcock for InformationWeek...

 

 

 

 

"Startup Skytap has cut a couple of powerful alliances for it’s cloud computing services, most recently joining forces with Hewlett-Packard to make it easier for companies to stress-test software against thousands of simulated end users without taxing their won data centers.

 

 

 

 

Skytap – named one of the InformationWeek Startup 50 in April, shortly after getting $7 million in venture funding – offers a Virtual Lab where developers try out applications by building test environments from its library of operating systems, databases, and middleware. Skytap already partners with Microsoft to enable Visual Studio Team System testing.

 

 

 

 

Skytap is providing HP’s LoadRunner testing tool to build test scenarios that push an application’s limits. The tests can be set up, managed, and torn down through HP’s Quality Center, which uses Skytap’s cloud computing resources to execute the actual test. The tests run as virtual workloads under VMware’s ESX Server.

 

 

 

 

Cloud computing is seen as a lower-cost way to offload workload spikes from the data center, and testing and quality assurance are likely prospects. Other cloud computing services such as Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud also can be used for testing. Companies pay Skytap from $1,000 to $10,000 a month for cloud-based testing."