Cloud Computing

cloud computing 300x199 Cloud Computing

Cloud computing sounds like you and your keyboard are on a mountain top somewhere trying to download your email. That may be fun, but most of us aren’t hoping to climb Mt. McKinley just to get our chance to buy Viagra from Canada. We might be more interested in the concept of cloud computing if it would enhance our lives or help us get our work done. Happily enough, for many businesses and web sites, it is the best innovation since the computer itself. Here are just some of the down to earth advantages offered by cloud hosting.

There are several ways that cloud computing has already made inroads into the Internet. The best example of cloud computing  are some of the free blogging platforms and social networking sites that have come into being in the last several years.

Services like “My Space” allow each user to set up their own web site. They can upload pictures and messages. However, the space they have to use is very limited. In exchange for having a free place to socialize with friends and family, they have to share their cyber real estate with advertisers. This is how such services support themselves.

Social networking sites are great for their intended purpose. They do enable people to “stay connected” by giving them a place to conduct virtual social outings. However, using these web sites do have drawbacks. It is easy to forget that anything you say can be copied, forwarded, and otherwise disseminated across the net for all to see.

For business, cloud computing has a more practical benefit. Instead of purchasing software licenses for each employee, the business buys a service that has all the software applications it needs. Each employee logs on to the service and uses what they need, and no more. In short, businesses can avoid the necessity  of buying and upgrading software licenses for each employee “just in case” they need it. If they did need it, all was well. However, money was wasted when the extra equipment and software sat unused on the employee’s computer desk top.

With cloud computing, the employer rents the server capacity he needs at any given time. He doesn’t have to own  anything. He can increase or decrease his out of pocket expenditures by contacting the vender to order exactly what he needs.

The greatest advantage to cloud computing is its flexibility. If you own a web site, for instance, your service can expand quickly to accommodate a sudden flood of visitors to your site. While you are just hoping for such a flood, you don’t have to spend your hard earned money buying enough server space to do the job until you actually need it.

Cloud computing is the wave of the future. Its financial flexibility already makes it a friend of business during this recession. Even when things are back to normal, it is doubtful that any executive will take his eye off the bottom line and return to an obsolete system. The savings in upgrades and maintenance make the notion of renting, rather than owning even more economically appealing.

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