Modern digital infrastructures, where companies run business-critical operations, are possible thanks to cloud computing.
There are different types of cloud computing; they might be private or public, or combine edge and cloud technologies. These classifications can often lead to confusion about what a cloud computing infrastructure is and how it differs from a hybrid cloud operation.
This analysis, written by Ray Fernandez for TechRepublic Premium, will do a deep dive into cloud and hybrid cloud technologies, explaining their differences and use cases.
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THE DIFFERENT TYPES OF HYBRID CLOUDS
Hybrid clouds also have different kinds of models. Let’s look at what tiered hybrid, edge hybrid and cloud bursting are.
Tiered hybrid: In this type of hybrid cloud, frontend applications are deployed on public clouds; usually, these are customer-facing, while backend applications run on on-premises or private clouds. This type of cloud is deployed to increase efficiency, security, ownership and reliability.
Edge hybrid: Edge hybrid clouds are deployed when a company needs to bring the data closer to the user to reduce latency or prevent downtime of business-critical operations in case there is no internet connection. These can be deployed, for example, in ocean logistics operations, factories, power plants or point of sales.
Cloud bursting: The cloud bursting model involves using a private computing environment for the baseline load and bursting the cloud temporarily when extra capacity is needed. These types of hybrid models are commonly used by companies or organizations that experience peak surges in traffic and use public cloud resources to meet those demands.
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TIME SAVED: Crafting this content required 18 hours of dedicated writing, editing and research.