Cloud Computing
The deployment and usage of computing resources—infrastructure, software applications, and storage, for example—that are off-premises and hosted/managed by a third party. There are three main categories of cloud computing, which can be private, public, or a combination of both (hybrid): Software as a Service (SaaS), Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS), and Platform as a Service (PaaS).
Related Links:
- State of the U.S. Cloud Channel
- How High Can You Fly in the Cloud
- Elevating Channel Effectiveness for the Cloud
- Plotting the March to the Cloud
- Podcast: Enabling Control in the Cloud
- Podcast: Managed Services in the Cloud Computing Era
- Podcast: Plotting Next-Generation Cloud Services
- The ‘Real’ Cloud Conversation to Have With Partners
- Show, Don’t Tell, Cloud Future
- Microsoft Shows Cloud Revenue Doesn’t Come Easy
- Making Cloud Money Is Hard and Will Remain So
- Cloud Forcing Hardware Vendors to Make Choices
- Cloud Success Requires Cultivating Cloud Partners
- Securing Enterprises in the Age of Cloud Computing
- Simplify the Customer’s Cloud Complexity
- Report Finds Where Partners Are Falling Short in Cloud
- 2112 Group’s Larry Walsh: Cloud Changes the Value Proposition
- ChannelCon 2017: Vendors Target Cloud, SMB Opportunities
- Online Tool and “Cloud Intelligence Program” Aimed at Helping Solution Providers’ Cloud Businesses
- Measuring, Benchmarking Your Company’s Cloud Services Business Performance
- New Cloud Intelligence Program and Online Tool Designed to Help Its Partners Build Bigger and More Profitable Cloud Practices
- Cloud Service Providers Are Banding Together to Scale Out Against Gigantic Service Providers
- The Cloud: Enabling an Interconnected World
- Oracle’s Hurd: Use Cloud to Meet Customers’ Real Strategic Needs