cloud database

Choosing a provider can be difficult due to the variety of cloud computing services available. One option may be better suited to some of your needs, but it may not suit every workload or type of operation. The good news is that you don't have to settle for a single cloud. Multicloud is a combination of multiple computing environments, which is different from a hybrid IT model.

This option is becoming more and more popular. However, multi-cloud environments are complex and therefore not simple to manage. There are a number of important considerations you should be aware of before attempting to migrate to a multi-cloud deployment.
What is cloudy?

A multicloud is a system composed of multiple public or private cloud services. Multicloud is similar in concept to hybrid cloud, with one important difference: In multicloud, there are multiple cloud environments, but they can be completely separate, or run different workloads. In a hybrid cloud, there are multiple cloud environments that are tightly integrated, allowing data and workloads to be transferred seamlessly between clouds.

Multicloud adoption is widespread—85% of enterprises operate multicloud as of 2018, according to IBM. There are several reasons why multicloud has become so common:
Cost and lock-in - The classic use case for multi-cloud is to provide organizations with leverage and avoid lock-in to a specific cloud provider. If you run on and integrate with multiple cloud database , you can offload workloads to the cloud provider that offers the best price/performance.
Shadow IT – Organizations are increasingly seeing teams deploy software without the coordination or permission of a central IT organization. Many shadow deployments happen on public clouds, which inadvertently creates multi-cloud.
Variable Cloud Capabilities - Each public cloud provider or private cloud platform offers different capabilities, and specific workloads or projects within an organization may not be satisfied with a specific platform's offerings. Over time, it has proven difficult to get everyone happy with one cloud provider or private cloud technology.
Geographic location - Every public cloud provider has data centers in different geographic locations. If you need to be close to specific branch offices or end users, you may find that running workloads in specific regions deployed by multiple cloud providers is the best option.
Business Continuity - Having multiple clouds increases your resiliency to outages or configuration issues specific to any one cloud provider.
In the remainder of this article, we'll provide a few key considerations you must be aware of as you plan your multicloud management strategy.
Posted in Other on August 04 at 06:18 AM

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