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companion photo for Cloud computing promise still stormy with reliability issues

Yesterday’s announcement of Google’s Chrome OS plans were met with plenty of discussion about what it might mean for the future of computing. The OS is essentially a lightweight version of Linux designed to run the company’s Chrome browser to access Google’s (or other third-party) cloud computing services, such as Gtalk, Gmail, Google Docs, and more. While there are numerous benefits of using such cloud services—like data persistence across multiple machines—what happens when the servers that run those services run into trouble, burn down, or lose power?

Unfortunately, it seems, there aren’t any new answers since we examined this issue almost one year ago. In the last week alone, there have been several high profile outages at data centers that host sites, such as video site DailyMotion, credit card authorization service Authorize.net, and Microsoft’s Bing Travel. Even the Google App Engine—a platform for third-parties to run their own cloud services—experienced performance issues that resulted in high latency and even data loss.

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