As enterprises have moved to the Cloud, their Cloud architecture has evolved to include a mix of public, private and edge Clouds, each with distinct advantages for specific workloads.
Public Clouds are readily available and highly scalable, with a flexible, pay-as-you-go pricing model for services that lets enterprises shift from capital expense to operational expense. Public Clouds provide ready access to new technologies such as blockchain, serverless computing and others, as well as connection to a host of Cloud technology partners.
For all the benefits of public Clouds, private Clouds continue to offer advantages in security, governance and performance/latency considerations. Private Clouds may also provide a lower cost for performance in some scenarios, and the capabilities of private Clouds now include Cloud-native services such as serverless computing and containers.
Edge Cloud architecture offers additional benefits by decentralizing processing to the edge of the enterprise network, accelerating cost-effective service creation at the edge and providing low-latency experiences.
Because public, private and edge Clouds offer distinct advantages for specific workloads, enterprises are likely to deploy some combination of each. Hybrid Cloud has become the de facto approach, with the average business today using five different Cloud providers. Hybrid Cloud environments are inherently complex, mainly due to the lack of consistency across platforms. Disconnected processes, tools, skill sets, governance and security frameworks create a chaotic infrastructure that results in greater complexity, added costs and a slower pace of innovation. To reap the benefits of hybrid Cloud infrastructure, enterprises must find a more consistent approach to Cloud infrastructure and operations. That’s where Dell Technologies Cloud can help.