Have any of you wondered the difference between traditional on-premises server management that we've done for years on end and the definition of "Private Cloud", which in numerous texts, seemed to appear to be the same thing, just with a new fancy name.
But then I thought about it some and thought, "yeah, there is a real difference between the two". It becomes a private cloud when it acts like what the cloud would be, in my data center.
1) Customers can provision their own servers, resources, and create IaaS, SaaS, or PaaS type platforms on their own, or with minimum IT involvement. IT keeps the stuff below the Service going.
2) Resources are elastic and can be expanded or contracted based on need. They can be pooled and allocated based on changing requirements in the organization.
3) Resources can be metered based on user, group, department, or project. Costs can be distributed and budgeted in that manner and charged back appropriately.
So you just can't have a data center and say, "yeah, I have a private cloud environment". It has to behave like a cloud for it to be one.
Just a random thing, hopefully it's helpful in the classroom.
Anyone have any other thoughts on this?
/r
But then I thought about it some and thought, "yeah, there is a real difference between the two". It becomes a private cloud when it acts like what the cloud would be, in my data center.
1) Customers can provision their own servers, resources, and create IaaS, SaaS, or PaaS type platforms on their own, or with minimum IT involvement. IT keeps the stuff below the Service going.
2) Resources are elastic and can be expanded or contracted based on need. They can be pooled and allocated based on changing requirements in the organization.
3) Resources can be metered based on user, group, department, or project. Costs can be distributed and budgeted in that manner and charged back appropriately.
So you just can't have a data center and say, "yeah, I have a private cloud environment". It has to behave like a cloud for it to be one.
Just a random thing, hopefully it's helpful in the classroom.
Anyone have any other thoughts on this?
/r