Articles & Books From Cloud Computing

Article / Updated 01-26-2024
In this article you will learn: What enterprise automation is Why you should implement enterprise automation How enterprise automation will impact businesses in the future What is enterprise automation? Enterprise automation increases efficiency by replacing repetitive, manual, and error-prone business processes with intelligent, automated, and more reliable workflows.
Cloud Computing For Dummies
Get your head—and your business—into the Cloud Cloud computing is no longer just a clever new toy in the world of IT infrastructure. Despite the nebulous name, it’s become a real and important part of our information architecture—and tech professionals who ignore it or try to skim their way through risk falling behind rapidly.
Article / Updated 06-09-2020
Planning your hybrid cloud computing strategy is a journey, not a simple set of steps. The right planning strategy is imperative to getting your plan to be operational. So, you need to look at the technical components, the business strategy, and the organizational plan. You have to focus on bringing all constituents to have a common understanding of how the cloud provides an opportunity for success.
Article / Updated 06-09-2020
Many companies that have begun to move into the cloud don’t do a lot of planning. Executives in different business units began to use public cloud services out of frustration because of inefficiencies in the IT organization. Over time, the cloud has taken a front seat in the way the overall business is approaching their future of computing platforms.
Article / Updated 06-09-2020
SaaS applications rarely operate completely independently. Companies often have an IT landscape that looks something like this: SaaS for CRM, a second SaaS for human resources, in-house analytics hardware behind a firewall, and AI for testing. Much of this information is fed into their enterprise resource planning (ERP) system that may be housed in their data center.
Cheat Sheet / Updated 02-23-2022
Digital transformation is the mantra of many organizations. There is no debate about it: Cloud computing has changed the way businesses operate. Small and mid-sized organizations may be all in on the cloud, while large enterprises are a hybrid and multicloud strategy. The cloud is helping startups challenge industry stalwarts, while at the same time, traditional companies are changing.
Article / Updated 06-09-2020
The cloud is the most disruptive computing revolution of our times; fostering dramatic changes in both the technology we live with every day and the way we use technology to transform business practices. As organizations are forced to deal with more innovative competitors, it is imperative that management can implement change fast.
Article / Updated 06-09-2020
It’s important to understand the common elements required to make clouds functional. In this section, we give you the basics of what you need to know. The figure illustrates the related elements that come together to create clouds. On the bottom of the diagram is a set of resource pools that feed a set of cloud delivery services.
Article / Updated 03-27-2020
If you’ve spent any time in Azure Monitor, you’ve seen some of the myriad log files that your Azure resources create. Think of all the ways that data is represented in Microsoft Azure, and imagine a way to put all your logs in a single data lake and run queries against it seamlessly.Azure Log Analytics is a platform in which you do just that: aggregate VM and Azure resource log files into a single data lake (called a Log Analytics workspace) and then run queries against the data, using a Microsoft-created data access language called Kusto (pronounced KOO-stoh) Query Language (KQL).
Article / Updated 03-27-2020
Ready to work with Microsoft Azure’s technology? Here, you learn how to deploy Linux and Windows VMs (virtual machines) from Azure Marketplace. Deploying a Linux VM It’s understandable that most Azure experts to get a kick out of the fact that Microsoft supports Linux natively in Azure. It was inconceivable up until a handful of years ago that we’d be able to run non-Windows VMs by using Microsoft technologies.