Estimated reading time: 3 minutes, 2 seconds

How Advanced Clouds Make a Difference Featured

How Advanced Clouds Make a Difference "Photo shoot was cancelled today so I took my chess set to the studio to shoot various chess ideas.."

Although the term “cloud computing” is often used to the extent that one may think cloud computing platforms are the same, the truth is that not all clouds are created equal.  Despite the difference that may exist, all clouds depend on the same server hardware that forms the backbone of any computer network. The difference between the traditional and the advanced cloud is the processing power and storage capacity of the available hardware over the internet.

Every cloud computing service provider wants to call itself an advanced cloud computing provider or call its services advanced cloud services. In the real sense, this is often more in theory than in practice because some of these services do not fit into the description. In a world where organizations need to fulfill their need to connect various departments, divisions, different locations, and personnel together, the problem emerges with the fragmentation that spans multiple global locations.  Therefore, advanced cloud services exist in virtual entities- like other clouds- with a final form built upon a shared infrastructure. Furthermore, advanced clouds allow us to change their shape more easily, unlike many cloud services sold in unchangeable form. Therefore, they are highly scalable upwards and downwards.

Unlike the traditional clouds, customers have more say on precisely what services they need and how they want them in advanced clouds. For instance, you can have an office in location A served with high-performance cloud services optimized for heavy transactional data throughput. At the same time, you can have offices in locations B, C, and D, given more storage power, more data analytics engine capabilities, and increased memory performance for B, C, and D, respectively.

Unlike most of today’s cloud services, advanced clouds offer a choice of fast and cheap storage in combination with virtual machines. These clouds are also easy to understand and manage, something that is critical in running modern organizations that need secure and robust operations. In today’s landscape, where remote work seems to be gaining ground, the services offered by cloud service providers have come into sharp focus while the providers always claim to be offering advanced cloud services.

No matter how vendors claim the abilities of their solutions, an advanced cloud should be able to provide simple access to the latest technology that is delivered, supported, maintained, and monitored by a qualified team of professionals. You are always assured of top performance, security, and availability of your network, unlike the traditional on-premise networking solutions that may not be sufficiently agile. With the advanced hardware and software, the advanced clouds deliver business-critical applications. If you have business-critical applications or sensitive data, advanced cloud focuses on keeping them secure within the network.

Choosing the right advanced cloud platform means you are benefiting from built-in redundancy and resilience. You get high availability, and the network is often built in a well-designed architecture and infrastructure. This makes a difference in aspects such as secure access to data and necessary applications and ensuring high performance and cost-effectiveness. These are the things that every organization needs to relate to its customers and adequately offer high-quality services.

In addition to offering you the ability to build experience state-of-the-art security in your business when accessing data and applications, advanced cloud eliminates the need to invest in the IT infrastructure and per usage like. For small businesses, this offers you the opportunity for growth. It allows them to compete with large organizations in the market while the employees only focus on other things. In short, advanced cloud is transforming the way in which businesses, regardless of their size conduct their operations in ways that people may not realize.

Read 1621 times
Rate this item
(0 votes)
Scott Koegler

Scott Koegler is Executive Editor for PMG360. He is a technology writer and editor with 20+ years experience delivering high value content to readers and publishers. 

Find his portfolio here and his personal bio here

scottkoegler.me/

Visit other PMG Sites:

We use cookies on our website. Some of them are essential for the operation of the site, while others help us to improve this site and the user experience (tracking cookies). You can decide for yourself whether you want to allow cookies or not. Please note that if you reject them, you may not be able to use all the functionalities of the site.