| By David Abramowski | Article Rating: |
|
| May 16, 2008 03:00 PM EDT | Reads: |
13,684 |
Grid computing is an impressive, confident, powerful
technology model, winning high-profile admirers as it approaches full maturity.
With the rise of Amazon Web Services, and, specifically, Amazon EC2, this style
of computing is enjoying a higher profile than ever before.
The professional sector is increasingly adopting a
distributed model for hosting and deploying applications that has become almost
commonplace in Web 2.0 applications. The ability to deliver different elements
of applications simultaneously over a
cohesive network of servers essentially
defines grid computing, also known as distributed computing. Grids embrace
software or middleware, which enables a user community to make use of the
combined power of networked hardware and access applications across the public Internet as services.
It’s no longer relevant to define grid computing in terms of expansive pioneering volunteer projects such as SETI or Folding@home. It’s also unnecessary for commercial applications of grid computing to be defined solely by consumer cloud computing success in the Web 2.0 sphere. By dedicating networked servers to application hosting, grid computing enables scalability and efficient application deployment to the enterprise, accelerating ROI for everyday businesses.
Published May 16, 2008 Reads 13,684
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More Stories By David Abramowski
David Abramowski is CEO of Mio Partnerz LLC, a new startup in Portland building a SaaS application taking advantage of cloud computing. Formerly, David was the CEO of MorphLabs where he led the team to build one of the first multi-environment platform as a service offerings on top of Amazon Web Services. Prior to joining Morph Labs, he was a Director of Product Marketing for Symantec, where he was responsible for introducing and enabling acquired endpoint technologies to Symantec's worldwide sales and partner organizations. Follow David's tweets at http://www.twitter.com/dabramowski
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