Multi Cloud
Multi-cloud refers to the deliberate use of two or more public cloud providers — such as AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud — within a single organization's infrastructure strategy, whether for redundancy, cost negotiation, avoiding vendor lock-in, or using each provider's distinct strengths.
12 resources across 2 libraries
Glossary Terms(7)
FinOps
FinOps is an operating model and cultural practice that brings engineering, finance, and business teams together to manage variable cloud spend collaboratively…
Multi-Cloud
Multi-cloud refers to the deliberate use of two or more public cloud providers — such as AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud — within a single organization's infrastr…
Hybrid Cloud
Hybrid cloud is an infrastructure model that combines private, on-premises (or dedicated) infrastructure with public cloud services, connected so that workload…
Cloud Migration
Cloud migration is the process of moving applications, data, and workloads from on-premises infrastructure (or one cloud provider) to a public cloud platform s…
Disaster Recovery
Disaster recovery (DR) is the set of policies, tools, and procedures organizations use to restore IT systems, data, and operations after a disruptive event suc…
OpenStack
OpenStack is an open-source cloud computing platform that provides infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS) by pooling compute, storage, and networking resources int…
Nutanix
Nutanix is a hyperconverged infrastructure (HCI) platform that combines compute, storage, and virtualization into a single software-defined system running on s…
Interview Questions(5)
What is Spinnaker and How Does It Orchestrate Multi-Cloud Deployments?
Spinnaker is an open-source, multi-cloud continuous delivery platform that models deployments as configurable pipelines of stages — bake, deploy, canary analys…
Terraform vs CloudFormation: What is the Difference?
Terraform is a cloud-agnostic, open-source infrastructure-as-code tool by HashiCorp that manages resources across many providers using its own HCL language and…
What is Pulumi and How Does It Differ from Terraform?
Pulumi is an infrastructure-as-code tool that lets you define cloud resources using general-purpose programming languages like TypeScript, Python, Go, or C#, i…
AWS vs Azure vs GCP: What Are the Core Differences?
AWS, Azure, and GCP are the three dominant public cloud providers offering the same core categories of service — compute, storage, networking, databases, and m…
Multi-Cloud vs Hybrid Cloud: What Is the Difference?
Multi-cloud means running workloads across two or more public cloud providers to avoid vendor lock-in or use best-of-breed services, while hybrid cloud means c…