Page 18 - How Cloud Computing Is Transforming Business and Why You Cant Afford to Be Left Behind
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INTRODUC TION



                 and understand why they came to you in the first place—and
                 what they may want next.
                     In its most popular form, such as Amazon’s Elastic Cloud
                 Compute (EC2), cloud computing is a reorganization of ex-
                 ternal resources into a hitherto hard to conceive of set of com-
                 puting services. Computing cycles of nearly any magnitude

                 can be tapped at will. The amount of resources devoted to the
                 job expands if, say, a surge in customer traffic makes it advis-
                 able to do so. And this expansive data center accessed through
                 the Internet can be utilized at low hourly rates with the swipe
                 of a credit card.
                     Perhaps the single most compelling feature of the cloud
                 is that it is programmatically accessible by outsiders, the end

                 users who have work for all those concentrated processing
                 units. Automated processes have been built in to make cloud
                 services readily available to anyone, regardless of location, as
                 long as that person can pay the hourly rate. It’s something like
                 iTunes. You upload a small set of information related to your-
                 self and get back a favorite song, without having to appear at a
                 store and sort through bins. However, in the cloud, it’s an en-
                 terprise application that goes out over the wire and the results
                 of processing all that data come back.

                     No single technology is responsible for the advent of the
                 cloud. Broadband communications, Web standards, multicore
                 servers, and the ability to manage large groups of computers
                 as if they were a single machine—these are the components
                 of cloud computing. Mix them together, along with a ten-
                 dency to organize business applications as services, and things





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