Cloud computing is poised to win the title of most popular, and populist, buzzword of 2009.
It certainly is gaining traction outside of IT. In fact, the idea of cloud computing has become so popular that executives and employees who don’t even work in the IT department are starting to ask for it by name.
Budget-minded CEOs are telling IT managers to look into cloud computing to reduce the amount of expensive hardware running their data centers; CFOs are interested because they’ve heard the model can slash costs associated with new IT projects; tech-savvy employees are asking for it because they think it sound
http://news.idg.no/cw/art.cfm?id=226A4A10-1A64-6A71-CE31AA8F95E41D64
Cloud computing is poised to win the title of most popular, and populist, buzzword of 2009.
Cloud computing is poised to win the title of most popular, and populist, buzzword of 2009.
It certainly is gaining traction outside of IT. In fact, the idea of cloud computing has become so popular that executives and employees who don’t even work in the IT department are starting to ask for it by name.
Budget-minded CEOs are telling IT managers to look into cloud computing to reduce the amount of expensive hardware running their data centers; CFOs are interested because they’ve heard the model can slash costs associated with new IT projects; tech-savvy employees are asking for it because they think it sound
http://news.idg.no/cw/art.cfm?id=226A4A10-1A64-6A71-CE31AA8F95E41D64
Cloud computing is poised to win the title of most popular, and populist, buzzword of 2009.