Cloud
Cloud
Cloud
and databases that run on those servers. Cloud servers are located in data centers
all over the world. By using cloud computing, users and companies do not have to
manage physical servers themselves or run software applications on their own
machines.
For businesses, switching to cloud computing removes some IT costs and overhead:
for instance, they no longer need to update and maintain their own servers, as the
cloud vendor they are using will do that. This especially makes an impact for small
businesses that may not have been able to afford their own internal infrastructure
but can outsource their infrastructure needs affordably via the cloud. The cloud
can also make it easier for companies to operate internationally, because employees
and customers can access the same files and applications from any location.
Virtual machines also make more efficient use of the hardware hosting them. By
running many virtual machines at once, one server becomes many servers, and a data
center becomes a whole host of data centers, able to serve many organizations.
Thus, cloud providers can offer the use of their servers to far more customers at
once than they would be able to otherwise, and they can do so at a low cost.
Users access cloud services either through a browser or through an app, connecting
to the cloud over the Internet � that is, through many interconnected networks �
regardless of what device they are using.
Formerly, SaaS, PaaS, and IaaS were the three main models of cloud computing, and
essentially all cloud services fit into one of these categories. However, in recent
years a fourth model has emerged:
Also, serverless functions scale up, or duplicate, as more people use the
application � imagine if the tenant's dining room could expand on demand when more
people come over for dinner! Learn more about serverless computing (FaaS).