ResearchThe application-defined data center
Enterprises can use data centers and cloud computing together to meet the infrastructure needs of emerging applications and new requirements. Read more »
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Enterprises can use data centers and cloud computing together to meet the infrastructure needs of emerging applications and new requirements. Read more »
Amazon targeted with the enterprise with new announcements at re:Invent 2014 but it took a balanced approach by also targeting developers and operations professionals. Read more »
Desktop-as-a-Service (DaaS) provides the benefits of desktop virtualization while transferring the capital investment and technical difficulty to third-party service providers. Read more »
Flash’s balance between speed and cost opens provides opportunities for emerging big-data applications as well as applications that are otherwise input/output intensive. Read more »
Enterprises can leverage bare metal clouds to have more control over cloud services, cost issues, better performance, and security concerns. Read more »
Shadow IT may seem like an easy solution, but stakeholders can end up with less than they wanted and put an organization’s data assets at risk. Read more »
Nearly 30 percent of U.S. IT decision makers at big companies are using cloud strategically, looking to drive new businesses and revenue streams. Read more »
Object storage is one of the key building blocks of infrastructure as a service. A number of disruptive trends are playing out in this part of the market as public cloud… Read more »
Enterprises typically consider more than one public-cloud provider so that they can minimize risk. But without standards and tools, moving workloads from one cloud provider to another is complex and expensive. Read more »
Wide-area networking is traditionally slow, expensive, and inflexible. SDN’s ability to abstract data-center networking operations away from the underlying hardware decreases costs, reduces time-to-market, and greatly increases flexibility. Read more »