It was September 2008 when Larry Ellison was asked about whether Oracle would pursue a cloud vision. His response at the time was that Oracle would eventually offer cloud computing products. But in the same conversation, Mr. Ellison also noted — in his inimitable fashion — that cloud computing was such a commonly used term as to be “idiocy.” Fair comment, actually, given that cloud computing is such an overloaded term. It can be used as a synonym for outsourced data center hosting. It can be used to define what Salesforce.com and NetSuite do — they offer software as a service. Some have referred to the Internet as the cloud … an uber-cloud containing all others. Cloud computing sometimes is imprecisely used to reference grid computing for database resource management or massively parallel scientific computing. And cloud computing has been taken to mean time sharing, which is both a style of business and a technology strategy that sought to share expensive computing resources across corporate boundaries at attractive price points. It appears on the surface that the IT industry has redefined much of what it does now and has done for quite a while as cloud computing, and that Oracle indeed might need only to change verbiage in a few of its ads to align them with a well-formed cloud vision.
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"Inspiration to use cloud and administration lattice innovations — Torment focuses that clouds and administration matrices address", International Journal of Novel Research and Development (www.ijnrd.org), ISSN:2456-4184, Vol.2, Issue 12, page no.55-58, December-2017, Available :http://www.ijnrd.org/papers/IJNRD1712012.pdf
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