The cloud servers that are owned, maintained, and located offsite. Hiring a hosting vendor who offers secure cloud services is the most common way that organizations switch to virtualization.
Fewer upfront costs, since you are not required to purchase hardware.
Potential for lower lifetime costs on configuration and maintenance.
Access to expert assistance on setup, configuration, maintenance, and software licenses.
Reduced need for in-house IT talent.
Potential to consolidate servers and increase workload efficiency.
Reduced environmental footprint, due to shared workloads.
If you’re looking for a basic Windows backup or cloud back up so you came to the right place
Companies are under increasing pressure to move faster and adapt to new threats and opportunities
Our cloud solutions use intelligent technologies to help you grow, innovate, and optimize time and resources – no matter the size of your business.
Learn how decision makers at small and midsize companies are using SAP's Cloud ERP solutions to keep pace with new technologies and rising customer expectations.
Find answers to the business challenges you face with our cloud solution that brings together everything you need—related products, services, and third-party applications
Cloud computing is : when you access computing services—like servers, storage, networking, software—over the internet (“the cloud”) from a provider. For example, instead of storing personal documents and photos on your personal computer’s hard drive, most people now store them online: that’s cloud computing.
Cloud computing platforms, like Azure and aws, tend to be less expensive and more secure, reliable, and flexible than on-premises servers. With the cloud, equipment downtime due to maintenance, theft, or damage is almost non-existent.
You can scale your compute and storage resources—up or down—almost instantly when your needs change on Azure or aws. Also, you typically pay only for the services you use, which provides a level of convenience and cost-control that’s almost impossible to achieve with on-site infrastructure.
Because there’s so much money to be made from attacks against businesses, today’s cybercriminals are highly skilled and very well-funded… and that makes them an even bigger threat to enterprises.
Cybercriminals are running efficient organizations that have the resources to develop increasingly sophisticated threats that can:
Defraud enterprises
Steal valuable intellectual property
Disrupt day-to-day business operations
Steal confidential information about customers
Hold businesses to ransom – by encrypting and ‘locking up’ essential data
Direct financial losses – from the actions of the attack itself
Damaging publicity and loss of business reputation – that could take years to recover from
Financial and legal penalties – imposed by regulatory bodies
Indirect financial losses – owing to the costs to recover systems and data to their pre-attack state