We all are aware of the concept of ‘rentals’. Renting a house means having a contract to stay in a property for a defined time interval and paying only for the facilities provided by the landlord. Similar is the concept of cloud infrastructure. There is a cloud service provider (landlord) who has a house (cloud infrastructure) with a set of services to serve the IT world. Businesses (the tenants) avail these services provided by the cloud provider and pay only for what they use. Here, the services may range anywhere from hardware, storage, network, and software.
Understanding Cloud Infrastructure: Components, Models, and Types
By Archna Oberoi on Jun 22, 2020 8:15:00 PM
What is Cloud Vendor Lock-in and How to Avoid it?
By Archna Oberoi on Jun 10, 2020 3:54:43 PM
With a massive growth in computing needs, enterprises consider cloud services as an opportunity to unburden themselves from the job of maintaining their own IT infrastructure and software platforms. The benefits of public cloud services are recognized by SMEs and large enterprises and thus, they are migrating from their on-premise infrastructure to cloud.
5 Evolving Trends in Software Development in 2020
By Archna Oberoi on Apr 21, 2020 3:18:00 PM
This year has marked a downturn for various industries. However, there are some that are actually enabling many to sail through the tough time. The software development industry is one of them.
How to Ensure Business Continuity Amid COVID-19 Crisis?
By Archna Oberoi on Apr 8, 2020 7:30:00 PM
The world health pandemic, COVID-19 has incapacitated businesses by impacting their productivity as well as overall economic growth. It has immobilized their employees, making them work remotely. COVID-19 has also presented the greatest career challenge to the CIOs, i.e. ensuring business continuity by taking care of data availability, employee engagement, and enabling business operations in the time of crisis.