If youâre reading this, youâve probably heard the term âcloudâ time and again. And who doesnât? Lately, itâs been slapped on everything! When looking for a definition, you get a million answers that beat around the subject, but donât really give you a direct answer thatâs easy to comprehend. A lot of cloud providers have been focusing chiefly on providing enterprises with services, but there are a large number of providers who want to cater to you, the consumer. The problem is that they probably arenât aware of the fact that you have virtually no idea what the cloud really is. Some people even try to take advantage of that as a selling point. Today, weâre discussing what the c loud really is!
What Is Cloud Computing?
The standard definition of cloud computing usually goes like this: Cloud computing is the use of another computerâs resources which are shared as a service across a network. At first, this sounds very confusing, because no one bothers to explain the âas a serviceâ part. Thatâs the part of cloud computing that sets it apart from accessing an ordinary website. I mean, when you browse to a site, you use another computerâs resources. That other computer dedicates a bit of its memory and processing power to send you the data that makes up the website. But it doesnât do this âas a service.â Letâs explain that a bit, shall we?
âAs a serviceâ refers to the ability to store and manipulate or otherwise configure data in a completely dedicated environment. Youâd feel like youâre using a piece of software on your own computer, but youâr e using it on your browser. In most cases, this is all you have to worry about. It gets much more complicated than that, but the complicated stuff is usually for enterprises. You just have to worry about this definition: A cloud service offers a piece of software that runs on a remote computer and that you can use through your browser. Thatâs as simple as it gets.
Examples Of Cloud Computing At Work
If you use DropBox, Gmail, Google Drive, or Google Docs, youâre using the cloud. Pretty neat, huh? Theyâre pieces of software that are run as a service on your browser. DropBox is a backup software, Gmail is an email management software that can replace MS Outlook completely, Google Drive is a library, and Google Docs is an office suite like Microsoft Office. Sites like DropBox are known as âStorage as a Service,â or STaaS. Google Docs provides âSoftware as a Service,â or SaaS.
There are tons of other types of cloud applications, but these two are the ones youâll see predominantly as a consumer. Now, compare one of these services to, say, this blog. Itâs providing you with content, but that doesnât mean youâre getting a service. This is a static document you read. Do you get the difference between a cloud service and a regular website now?
So, remember: DropBox is cloud, MTE (this blog) is a regular Internet site. This is the simplest clarification.
If you still feel confused, ask a question in the comments section below and Iâll help you understand the difference.
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