Public clouds are the most common way of deploying cloud computing which are all hardware, software, and other supporting infrastructure is owned and managed by the cloud provider. In a public cloud, you share the same hardware, storage, and network devices with other organizations or cloud “tenants.” Public cloud deployments are frequently used to provide web-based email, online office applications, storage, and testing and development environments.
SunFlex’s solution will provide:
- Lower costs—no need to purchase hardware or software, and you pay only for the service you use.
- No maintenance—your service provider provides the maintenance.
- Near-unlimited scalability—on-demand resources are available to meet your business needs.
- High reliability—a vast network of servers ensures against failure.
A private cloud consists of computing resources used exclusively by one business or organization. The private cloud can be physically located at your organization’s on-site datacenter, or it can be hosted by a third-party service provider. But in a private cloud, the services and infrastructure are always maintained on a private network and the hardware and software are dedicated solely to your organization. In this way, a private cloud can make it easier for an organization to customize its resources to meet specific IT requirements.
SunFlex’s solution will provide:
- More flexibility— can customize its cloud environment to meet specific business needs.
- Improved security— resources are not shared with others, so higher levels of control and security are possible.
- High scalability— afford the scalability and efficiency of a public cloud.
Hybrid clouds combine on-premises infrastructure, or private clouds, with public clouds so organizations can reap the advantages of both. In a hybrid cloud, data and applications can move between private and public clouds for greater flexibility and more deployment options.
SunFlex’s solution will provide:
- Control—can maintain a private infrastructure for sensitive assets.
- Flexibility—can take advantage of additional resources in the public cloud when needed.
- Cost-effectiveness—with the ability to scale to the public cloud, you pay for extra computing power only when needed.
- Ease—transitioning to the cloud doesn’t have to be overwhelming because you can migrate gradually—phasing in workloads over time.