Week 1: Introduction to Cloud Computing

Réussis tes devoirs et examens dès maintenant avec Quizwiz!

Object

An encapsulation of a data structure, and the methods or operations to access those structures

4 Cloud Computing Obstacles

* Quality of provided service to end users * Vendor Lock-in * Data Confidentiality and Auditability * In-house personal implications

Evolution in Computing Software

- Changes in the design philosophy for engineering computing software - Process-Oriented Architecture * Programs are functionally decomposed into processes, that act upon shared data * Data structure are complex and large

4 Key Aspects of Utility Computing

- Computing resources can be requested and provided to any one on demand - Seamless up-scale and down-scaling of resources from the utility providers - Low or no initial set-up costs - Pay-as-you -go resource usage

6 Key parameters of Cloud Computing

- Pooled computing resources - Elastic scaling of resources - Virtualisation of resources - Pay-as-you-go or Metered resource usage - Resource delivery over the internet - Automation of new resource deployment and deprovisioning

Advantages of Cloud Computing

- Reduction in business costs * CapEx to OpEx * Cheaper OpEx costs * Reduction of space usage * Huge reduction in time and man-power - Technology to Core Business Shift * Enables organisations to focus on core-business activities * Gain competitive advantage by focusing on core-business activities

Object-Oriented Architecture

- Reflection of the real world comprising of objects or entities - Objects communicate with each other by passing messages

Evolution of Computing Harware

- Single stand-alone machine (1950s) - Commercial Mainframes (1960s) - Personal Computers (1980s) * 1990s - World Wide Web

Utility Computing

- The notion that computing resources can be organised and distributed as a utility - "fifth utility" for human beings

Service-Oriented Architectures

- The software application is construed as bein organised of "software services (components)" - A software service can be "invoked" to deliver its functionality

Grid Computing

- late 1990s - "knitting" of autonomous computing resources - Harnessing the power of the web for solving complex problems that cannot be solved by a single computer

NIST Definition of Cloud Computing

A model for enabling convenient, on-demand network access to a shared pool of configurable computing resources that can be rapidly provisioned and released with minimal management effort or service provider interaction

Software Service

A piece of code that provides a given (well defined) functionality e.g. Authentication, Registration, Billing, etc.


Ensembles d'études connexes

The Unfinished Nation, Chapter 14, Review

View Set

FINN 1003 (CHAPTER 10), FINN 1003 (CHAPTER 9), FINN 1003 (CHAPTER 6), FINN 1003 (CHAPTER 7), FINN 1003 (CHAPTER 8)

View Set

Chapter 38: Assessment and Management of Patients With Rheumatic Disorders

View Set

Chapter 11- Modern Atomic Theory

View Set