How does cloud computing improve collaboration and productivity?
Definition and Structure
- Hybrid cloud combines private (on-premises) and public cloud environments.
- Enables data and application sharing between platforms.
- Offers flexibility to shift workloads as needed.
- Can include multiple cloud providers and edge computing.
- Provides a unified management interface across environments.
When Data Control is Critical
- Required when handling sensitive or regulated data.
- Keeps critical workloads on-premise for compliance reasons.
- Allows specific data to remain local while leveraging cloud tools.
- Meets regional data residency requirements.
- Supports hybrid deployments in finance, healthcare, and government.
During Gradual Cloud Migration
- Useful for businesses transitioning from legacy systems.
- Allows phased migration to reduce operational risk.
- Supports coexistence of old and new infrastructure.
- Enables testing of cloud workloads before full adoption.
- Avoids disruption by moving workloads incrementally.
For Improved Business Continuity
- Provides redundancy and disaster recovery options.
- Enables failover between on-premise and cloud systems.
- Reduces downtime during network or hardware failures.
- Supports backup storage in the cloud with local restoration options.
- Ensures operational continuity even during outages.
Optimizing Performance and Cost
- Runs predictable, high-performance tasks on-premise.
- Moves variable or low-priority workloads to public cloud.
- Avoids overloading on-premise infrastructure.
- Balances cost savings with operational control.
- Allows usage of specialized cloud services without full migration.
