SoLiXG:Compute: Difference between revisions
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As a verb, ''to compute'' could simply mean using a computer, calculating or making sense. More recently, in the context of [[SoLiXG:Key-concepts#The cloud|The Cloud]], ''compute'' is being used as a noun to signify the combination of processing power, memory, networking and storage that is required to run software applications. The objectification of computing (from verb to noun) is synchronous with the rise of infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS). Cloud companies such as AWS, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud provide units of compute that are calculated as time-slice tickets to allocated resources that will be “served up” by a data center. By assembling hardware, software, and network-architecture into flexible commodities, computing capacity can be sold by the hour or second. | As a verb, ''to compute'' could simply mean using a computer, calculating or making sense. More recently, in the context of [[SoLiXG:Key-concepts#The cloud|The Cloud]], ''compute'' is being used as a noun to signify the combination of processing power, memory, networking and storage that is required to run software applications. The objectification of computing (from verb to noun) is synchronous with the rise of infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS). Cloud companies such as AWS, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud provide units of compute that are calculated as time-slice tickets to allocated resources that will be “served up” by a data center. By assembling hardware, software, and network-architecture into flexible commodities, computing capacity can be sold by the hour or second. | ||
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Revision as of 09:42, 5 December 2023
Compute
As a verb, to compute could simply mean using a computer, calculating or making sense. More recently, in the context of The Cloud, compute is being used as a noun to signify the combination of processing power, memory, networking and storage that is required to run software applications. The objectification of computing (from verb to noun) is synchronous with the rise of infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS). Cloud companies such as AWS, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud provide units of compute that are calculated as time-slice tickets to allocated resources that will be “served up” by a data center. By assembling hardware, software, and network-architecture into flexible commodities, computing capacity can be sold by the hour or second.