The next big trend sounds nebulous, but it's not so fuzzy when you
view the value proposition from the perspective of IT professionals. Cloud
computing is a type of computing that relies on sharing computing resources rather than having local servers or
personal devices to handle applications.
In cloud computing, the word cloud (also
phrased as "the cloud") is used as a metaphor for "the Internet," so the phrase cloud computing means "a type of Internet-based
computing," where different services -- such as servers, storage and
applications -- are delivered to an organization's computers and devices through
the Internet.
Cloud computing is comparable to grid computing, a type of computing where unused processing
cycles of all computers in a network are harnesses to solve problems too
intensive for any stand-alone machine.
The goal of cloud computing is to apply traditional super computing, or high-performance computing power, normally used by military and
research facilities, to perform tens of trillions of computations per second,
in consumer-oriented applications such as financial portfolios, to deliver
personalized information, to provide data storage or to power large, immerse
computer games.
To do this, cloud computing uses networks of
large groups of servers typically
running low-cost consumer PC technology with specialized connections to spread
data-processing chores across them. This shared IT infrastructure contains large pools of
systems that are linked together. Often, virtualization techniques are used to maximize the power of
cloud computing.
Cloud Computing Standards
The standards for connecting the computer systems and the software
needed to make cloud computing work are not fully defined at present time,
leaving many companies to define their own cloud computing technologies.
Cloud computing systems offered by companies, like IBM's "Blue
Cloud" technologies for example, are based on open standards and open source software which link together computers that are
used to to deliver Web 2.0 capabilities like mash-ups or mobile commerce.
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