![]() ![]() They don't want to buy hard-drives every month. The reasons they talk of are also quite logical. Google drive or sky drive or box or dropbox or etc or etc. In short they need their existing storage frameworks to be seamlessly replaced by But the most interesting ones are talking of already available cloud solutions. Some of them are good with corporate clouds, some to their private ones. I have personally spoken to a bunch of folks at different conferences (some related to Cloud Computing) who understand the need and actually need 'on-demand-cloud-storage-with-one-click' that is integrate-able with their legacy (or not so legacy) enterprise storage solutions. Many a times such 'robots', so fascinated by cloud or rain, are in dire need for solutions that can be dumb-proof and also 'Cloud oriented' (I consciously use the term 'Cloud Oriented' in a smaller scope from what it can actually mean). Such APIs not only make private applications integrate-able but also brings in possibilities for seamlessly consuming cloud services with just one click of a mouse for the end-user. To make things more flexible or professional these days we get free development APIs from these providers. And thus businesses like Google Drive and Sky Drive have rocketed many folds in such short span of times in consumer to SMBs to large business solutions. ![]() For example, the obvious drawbacks of maintaining redundant storage media are not handled anymore. At least a bunch of people are at peace as the complexity of management (be it storage or any other thing) is left to the best brains at an affordable cost. Though the term 'Cloud' is a bit over-rated (totally personal opinion) Cloud storage has cleverly become a good selling point for many solutions. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |