
You’ve heard about the cloud. People, both in the office and out, are using this 2.0 term that has revolutionized IT in the past few years. We access personal clouds multiple times a day without realizing. Our email, contacts, music, even word documents and bank account information can be accessed on various platforms because of our personal clouds. Social networks like Facebook and Twitter are applications on public clouds that can be reached over any online connection. Whether personal or public, clouds have expanded from a network infrastructure to a host for data services and applications.
In short, clouds have allowed us to access anything online, anywhere. We’re able to sync our computers, smartphones, tablets, and easily organize and share data between them. Public clouds sell services to anyone on the Internet. This distributed computing allows us to access shared data at high speeds. It’s what keeps us connected at all times.
Technology at our fingertips evolved from a luxury to an ordinary occurrence. On a private platform, clouds host services for a select, limited amount of people in a particular network. A company can develop networks on three services with different infrastructures:
- Software as a service (SaaS): the host provides the software product and monitors the data. Services cover a broad market from email to inventory to data processing. Users can tap in to the server from anywhere. SaaS is the most popular platform.
- Platform as a service (PaaS): the provider hosts software on their platform where users are able to create tools and applications over the Internet (Google Apps is an example).
- Infrastructure as a service (IaaS): specializing in internal functions, virtual server maintenance configures servers and data storage for easy recovery. Companies pay per capacity and can increase online space to accommodate immediate and future growth (as in you pay as you go).
As clouds grow with the formation of new networks, privacy will become a bigger issue as the providers will be required to offer customized privacy controls to users. On a smaller scale, it’s possible that personal clouds can develop in ways that tailor to your specific interests based on previously collected data. Essentially, it will be able to anticipate what you do or where you go before you’re doing it. This tech shift has broadened the market of what, where, when, and how we can access virtually anything hosted online.









