03-07-2012, 07:45 AM
Nowadays, I have seen a lot of users not entirely understanding what is Cloud Hosting, and this is the reason for the current thread.
Cloud Hosting is a scalable technology, based on the usage of multiple inter-connected servers with the purpose of web-hosting. In simple words, when your website is cloud hosted, it will operate on multiple servers instead of just one. Herein, the overall resource quota could be theoretically unlimited. For example, if your website is hosted on a standard dedicated hosting, then it will be limited to the resources available on this single server, but when your website is cloud hosted, it can use the available resources of a certain number of inter-connected servers. This architecture is very ``flexible``, because when your cloud is running out of resources, you can simply add more servers, which is impossible with the ``standard`` hosting. Yes, you can add extra HDD`s, RAM, etc.., to your dedicated server, but at some point it will be physically impossible to upgrade it any further. Another key element for this ``flexibility`` is the method on which base are calculated the monthly ``cloud`` costs. The cloud hosting provider is charging only for what you have used, and you won`t pay for unused parts of your resource quota, which is the current situation with shared hosting. Because of the above facts, Cloud Hosting is the potential future leader on the web-hosting scene. However, there are some problems awaiting solutions, and the security aspect is one of them. In my opinion, it is just a matter of time for this architecture to be ``polished`` to perfection, because most of the web-based ``giants`` (Google, Yahoo) have already implemented the ``cloud`` technology in their services.
Cloud Hosting is a scalable technology, based on the usage of multiple inter-connected servers with the purpose of web-hosting. In simple words, when your website is cloud hosted, it will operate on multiple servers instead of just one. Herein, the overall resource quota could be theoretically unlimited. For example, if your website is hosted on a standard dedicated hosting, then it will be limited to the resources available on this single server, but when your website is cloud hosted, it can use the available resources of a certain number of inter-connected servers. This architecture is very ``flexible``, because when your cloud is running out of resources, you can simply add more servers, which is impossible with the ``standard`` hosting. Yes, you can add extra HDD`s, RAM, etc.., to your dedicated server, but at some point it will be physically impossible to upgrade it any further. Another key element for this ``flexibility`` is the method on which base are calculated the monthly ``cloud`` costs. The cloud hosting provider is charging only for what you have used, and you won`t pay for unused parts of your resource quota, which is the current situation with shared hosting. Because of the above facts, Cloud Hosting is the potential future leader on the web-hosting scene. However, there are some problems awaiting solutions, and the security aspect is one of them. In my opinion, it is just a matter of time for this architecture to be ``polished`` to perfection, because most of the web-based ``giants`` (Google, Yahoo) have already implemented the ``cloud`` technology in their services.