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Google’s cloud picks up business from Amazon customers Airbnb, Netflix, & Rovio (updated)

Google’s cloud picks up business from Amazon customers Airbnb, Netflix, & Rovio (updated)

Google’s cloud picks up business from Amazon customers Airbnb, Netflix, & Rovio (updated)
Above: Joerg Heilig, vice president of engineering for cloud developer experience at Google, speaks at the Google Cloud Platform Live event in San Francisco on Nov. 4.
Image Credit: Jordan Novet/VentureBeat


Updated at 5:44 p.m. Pacific on Wednesday with clarifications about Airbnb’s usage of the Google Cloud Platform
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SAN FRANCISCO — If you’re looking for proof that Google’s public cloud is taking off, well, Google’s got you covered.

During the company’s Google Cloud Platform Live event, Google cited several examples of companies that had started to use the Google Cloud Platform in lieu of, or in addition to, the largest public cloud around, Amazon Web Services.

Among the Cloud Platform customers Google teased today were Airbnb, Atomic Fiction, Citrix, Netflix, and Rovio, all of which have come forward as Amazon cloud customers in the past.
Amazon has long touted Airbnb as a major user of its cloud. Now Airbnb appears to be using the cloud market’s highly competitive nature as a way to get great deals with cloud providers.

Developers elsewhere could well interpret Airbnb’s trust of a cloud as an indicator of good quality. That’s why mentions of major Amazon cloud customers on Google have an impact.
And Google isn’t just targeting Web companies.

Announcements like cloud credits and the Container Engine service suggest that Google wants business from startups, but new peering capability and alliances with partners like PwC show that Google also wants to win the trust of big companies like newly announced customer Office Depot.
Presumably over time Google will add customers from small to large, and analysts have already observed that companies are interested.

That means over the next few years Google should be able to shake off its appearance for some as a cloud provider with many features and partnerships but few major customers.
At least Googlers want to see that happen.

Google’s cloud is “starting to become interesting to larger enterprises as well,” Shailesh Rao, head of Google’s cloud business unit,” told reporters in a press conference.

Source
http://venturebeat.com/2014/11/04/google-cloud-airbnb/

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