Cloud-first
Cloud-only
COLOCATION
digital business
digital community
digital transformation
edge computing
egress fees
hybrid cloud
Hybrid it
interconnection
latency
multicloud
on-premises
private cloud
software-defined network (Sdn)
software-programmable interconnection (Spi)
public cloud
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cloud-first
/kloud-fərst/
noun
An approach of first considering how the technology associated with a new IT project or IT refresh can be setup and managed in the cloud.
cloud-only
/kloud-ōnlē/
noun
An approach in which an organization uses cloud computing for all of its IT operations, including systems, applications and services.
colocation
/kō-lō-kā-shən/
noun
The practice of locating servers in a data center provider’s facility instead of on-premises. The data center provides the space, power, cooling, networking, and may provide access to an array of network and cloud service providers as well as IT service providers.
digital business
/'dijidl 'biznəs/
noun
An organization that leverages digital technology to elevate efficiency and increase value through its products, services and customer experience.
digital community
/'dijidl kə 'myoonədē/
noun
An ecosystem of businesses and business partners that can connect through an exchange platform enabling private, direct interconnection among the parties. The community might include providers of public cloud services, private cloud services, network and telecom services, SaaS, monitoring and security services, managed services and systems integration services.
digital transformation
/'dijidl ,tran(t)sfər'māSH(ə)n/
noun
The process of adopting digital processes and movement from analog systems to digital systems and/or activities that organizations pursue to become digital business (digitally enabled).
edge computing
/ej kəm'pyoodiNG/
noun
Data is created, processed, stored and analyzed at the network edge instead of being sent to and from a location farther away from the sources of data. Edge computing enables low latency for applications such as 5G communication, video, gaming and artificial intelligence. Interconnection close to the edge accelerates data sharing speed.
egress fees
/'ē,gres fēs/
plural noun
Monthly charges incurred when data is moved out of a public cloud. The higher the data transfer activity, the greater the fees.
hybrid cloud
/'hī,brid kloud/
noun
The use of both private and public cloud services that can be managed within a unified infrastructure.
hybrid IT
/'hī,brid 'ī tē/
noun
An infrastructure approach that combines on-premises architecture and/or colocation with cloud services that can be public, private or a mix.
interconnection
/'in(t)ərkə,nekSH(ə)n/
noun
Low-latency data exchange, enabled by a colocation ecosystem, among parties connected directly and privately. Interconnection enables IT service providers, content delivery networks, telcos, network service providers and other enterprises to be available “side-by-side” in the colocation data center.
latency
/'lātənsē/
noun
The time measured in milliseconds that elapses between a user action (e.g., request a file) and the response of a computer, network or the internet.
multicloud
/'məltē kloud/
noun
The use of more than one cloud service, such as SaaS, PaaS or IaaS, from two or more private or public cloud service providers.
on-premises
/on 'preməsəz/
idiom
IT infrastructure, consisting of software and hardware, that is located onsite versus hosted in the cloud or colocated in a remote data center.
private cloud
/'prīvit kloud/
noun
A cloud environment in which the hardware and software are dedicated to one organization, with controls to limit access to authorized users.
public cloud
/'pəblik kloud/
noun
A cloud environment that is a pay-for-use virtualized environment offered by a third-party in which computing resources such as software and virtual machines can be shared by users with controls to maintain privacy. Large public cloud service providers include AWS, Microsoft Azure, Google Cloud Platform and Oracle Cloud.
software-defined network (SDN)
/'sôf(t)we də'fīnd 'netwərk/
noun
A network architecture approach that employs software or application programming interfaces (APIs) to manage network hardware and direct traffic. Traditionally, network traffic is controlled by dedicated devices such as routers and switches which are provisioned remotely, reduce network performance and have more one-size-fits-all security controls. With SDN, organizations can provision centrally, improve network performance, apply granular security controls and reduce CapEx.
software-programmable interconnection (SPI)
/'sôf(t)we prōraməb(ə)l ,in(t)ərkənekSH(ə)n/
noun
This many-to-many form of connectivity is considered the next-generation of SDN. SPI connects multiple data centers via a virtual “fabric” which links and unifies storage, networking and processing functions.