Cloud computing has taken off as one might expect of any technology that improves so substantially upon the previous user experience. Based upon the Internet’s premise that computing is best handled by many machines, cloud computing is poised to take over fully.
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Instead of relying on your own device whose hard drive is susceptible to irregularities, storing your data in the cloud – otherwise known as multiple servers in remote locations connected by the Internet – is becoming more standard as the days pass.
The basic appeal is easy to appreciate. Add in the synchronization that allows multiple users located across the globe to access the exact same document in real time with real time updates – as they themselves make them – and cloud computing reveals itself to be the future, here in the present. Here are two companies who bring the external cloud to life:
- Amazon. Already a household name for providing virtually anything to shoppers online, Amazon was also a near pioneer of cloud computing. So it should be. Amazon essentially created a cloud-based shopping experience long before cloud computing was a term that had any meaning
By providing shoppers real time inventory numbers as they browse, as well as instantaneous pricing changes, they’ve had a grasp of the cloud’s potential for longer than most. Their Elastic Compute Cloud offering solidifies their position as an innovative cloud computing purveyor.
- Enomaly. Allowing computer whizzes to handle both internal and external resources from one location, Enomaly’s Elastic Computing Platform assists enterprises in dealing with all their computer assets simultaneously. That’s so regardless of whether those assets are physical or in the cloud; a necessary offering as companies transition data from the physical world to the virtual
Those companies help organizations to transfer data to an external cloud. Another option is to maintain an internal cloud (can be a substitute for NAS storage, though this is still very popular and effective), often referred to as a server farm. In this way, a company owns the hardware, and is capable of increasing its size, and maintaining its security to whatever extent they see fit.
If they don’t have a high security prioritization, they can sell off excess capacity to make the project financially viable. Management of the farm can be outsourced if the IT staff on hand isn’t qualified to handle such scale and depth.
Still another option in the triumvirate of cloud computing options is known as software as a service, in which software is licensed to the end user by a company who has the software on its own system, and sells off access to portions of it to end users.
Cutting out the need for an entire IT department to handle problems which pop up, this solution is probably a lot more exciting for burgeoning businesses which don’t already have an IT department in place. Salesforce.com, Oracle, Dell and Right now Technologies are leaders in this space.
The cloud will impact everyone in short order. While today it may seem to be a concept for early adopters, utilizing the cloud is a much more straightforward computing model than that in place in which local hardware, susceptible to many threats, is the home to one’s important data.






