The term "Cloud" (usually short for Cloud Computing) has most commonly been used as a marketing term for VPS Services. "Come Test our Cloud Servers!" sometimes merely means a single VM on a single server with no hardware redundancy. Now today, the general consensus has been "Cloud" has to represent more than a single server, but in-fact a network of servers with redundancy. Some of this is implemented (e.g. OpenStack or CloudStack) as SAN + Hypervisors-style infastructure.
In September 2011 the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) published a paper titled "The NIST Definition of Cloud Computing" which defined the characteristics of a cloud computing, the service models, and deployment models (Page 2 and 3). More specifically, the ability for the consumer (client) to self-service themselves without requiring human interaction with their provider on demand, and the ability for resource pooling (multi-tenant model).
By NIST's definition, the definition of "Cloud" isn't defined by redundancy but merely the client-provider interaction (having everything on-demand). Therefore, with this definition all VPS Providers are technically Cloud providers.
What do you think?
Do you think "Cloud" should be defined by infrastructure in addition to consumer-focused definitions?
In September 2011 the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) published a paper titled "The NIST Definition of Cloud Computing" which defined the characteristics of a cloud computing, the service models, and deployment models (Page 2 and 3). More specifically, the ability for the consumer (client) to self-service themselves without requiring human interaction with their provider on demand, and the ability for resource pooling (multi-tenant model).
By NIST's definition, the definition of "Cloud" isn't defined by redundancy but merely the client-provider interaction (having everything on-demand). Therefore, with this definition all VPS Providers are technically Cloud providers.
What do you think?
Do you think "Cloud" should be defined by infrastructure in addition to consumer-focused definitions?
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