SoLiXG:Cloud infrastructure: Difference between revisions

From titipi
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 2: Line 2:
== The cloud ==
== The cloud ==


The Cloud is a marketing term that has become a commonplace way to refer to centrally managed computational infrastructure to which customers can subscribe. The Cloud delivers services such as storage and on-line applications across a continuously growing number of industries, from financial markets and health institutions to game industries, mining, governments and agriculture. The Cloud combines a particular infrastructure set-up, an agile technological approach, and subscription rather than ownership as an economic approach. It has currently become the dominant model for delivering computational power in most sectors, both for-profit and non-profit.
The Cloud is a marketing term that has become a commonplace way to refer to centrally managed computational infrastructure to which customers can subscribe. The Cloud delivers services such as storage and on-line applications across a continuously growing number of industries, from financial markets and health institutions to game industries, mining, governments and agriculture. The Cloud combines a particular infrastructure set-up, an agile technological approach, and subscription rather than ownership as an economic approach. It has currently become the dominant model for delivering [[SoLiXG:Key-concepts#Compute|compute]] in most sectors, both for-profit and non-profit.

Revision as of 15:54, 15 September 2023

The cloud

The Cloud is a marketing term that has become a commonplace way to refer to centrally managed computational infrastructure to which customers can subscribe. The Cloud delivers services such as storage and on-line applications across a continuously growing number of industries, from financial markets and health institutions to game industries, mining, governments and agriculture. The Cloud combines a particular infrastructure set-up, an agile technological approach, and subscription rather than ownership as an economic approach. It has currently become the dominant model for delivering compute in most sectors, both for-profit and non-profit.