Vendor Lock In
Vendor lock-in is a state of dependency in which a customer becomes reliant on a single cloud provider's proprietary services, APIs, data formats, or tooling to such a degree that switching to a different provider becomes prohibitively costly, complex, or risky.
8 resources across 2 libraries
Glossary Terms(6)
Azure Arc
Azure Arc is a Microsoft Azure service that extends Azure management, governance, and services to infrastructure running outside Azure — including on-premises…
Google Anthos
Google Anthos is a hybrid and multi-cloud application management platform built on Kubernetes and Google's open-source Config Sync and Service Mesh technologie…
Cloud Repatriation
Cloud repatriation is the practice of migrating workloads, applications, or data back from a public cloud provider to on-premises infrastructure or a private d…
Vendor Lock-in
Vendor lock-in is a state of dependency in which a customer becomes reliant on a single cloud provider's proprietary services, APIs, data formats, or tooling t…
Cloud Cost Governance
Cloud cost governance is the set of policies, processes, and tooling an organization uses to track, control, and optimize its cloud spending, encompassing budg…
Cloud Backup Strategy
A cloud backup strategy is the deliberate plan an organization follows for copying and storing data in cloud infrastructure so it can be recovered after accide…
Interview Questions(2)
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…