In the simplest terms, cloud computing
means storing and accessing data and programs over the Internet instead
of your computer's hard drive. The cloud is just a metaphor for the
Internet. It goes back to the days of flowcharts and presentations that
would represent the gigantic server-farm infrastructure of the Internet
as nothing but a puffy, white cumulonimbus cloud, accepting connections
and doling out information as it floats.
What cloud computing is not about is your hard drive. When you store data on or run programs from the hard drive, that's called local storage
and computing. Everything you need is physically close to you, which
means accessing your data is fast and easy, for that one computer, or
others on the local network. Working off your hard drive is how the
computer industry functioned for decades; some would argue it's still
superior to cloud computing, for reasons I'll explain shortly.
The cloud is also not about having a
dedicated network attached storage (NAS) hardware or server in
residence. Storing data on a home or office network does not count as
utilizing the cloud. (However, some NAS will let you remotely access
things over the Internet, and there's at least one NAS named "My Cloud," just to keep things confusing.)
For it to be considered "cloud computing,"
you need to access your data or your programs over the Internet, or at
the very least, have that data synchronized with other information over
the Web. In a big business, you may know all there is to know about
what's on the other side of the connection; as an individual user, you
may never have any idea what kind of massive data-processing is
happening on the other end. The end result is the same: with an online
connection, cloud computing can be done anywhere, anytime.
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