Glossary of terms

Cloud Platform

A cloud platform is an infrastructure that includes an operating system and server hardware aimed at providing cloud computing to customers. It allows companies to rent computing resources over the Internet, paying only for actual use, instead of purchasing, configuring and managing their own servers and equipment to provide access to these resources within their own premises.

Cloud platforms create a virtual pool of shared resources to provide computing, storage, and networking services over the Internet. Customers access these resources as needed, paying only for the resources they use. Virtualization technologies used on cloud platforms allow the creation of virtual machines (VMs) on a single server, which allows the use of separate operating systems and applications for different clients on the same physical server. Customers can access cloud computing from both public and private cloud platforms. With cloud platforms, organizations can backup, test, and build applications, analyze large amounts of data, provide on-demand software on a global scale, access business intelligence, and create cloud applications.

Cloud platforms and cloud computing solutions offer a number of benefits to businesses, such as:

Greater flexibility

By accessing computing services through a cloud platform rather than on-premises technology, companies can quickly scale to meet business requirements while avoiding the risk of over- or under-provisioning.

Cost savings

Cloud platforms avoid the capital expenditure of building an on-premises data center and reduce the cost of managing IT staff. Companies pay only for the cloud resources they use, resulting in significant savings.

Increased productivity

Since cloud platforms are managed by third-party providers, IT teams are free from the tasks of managing, maintaining, and updating on-site hardware and software, which helps increase productivity.

Improved security

Cloud service providers invest significant resources in cloud security technologies, providing more robust protection than most organizations can afford for their own data centers.

Greater reliability

By utilizing a huge virtualized pool of resources, cloud platforms are more resilient than on-premises data centers. Distributed cloud platforms, combining multiple servers and locations around the world, provide high reliability and fast recovery from possible failures.

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