Cloud computing is the on-demand delivery of internet technology services.
Overview ; What are examples of cloud services? ; How do cloud services work? ; Cloud infrastructure ; Cloud platforms ; Cloud software ; Explore Red Hat Cloud Services
Trust your cloud · Get security from the ground up, backed by a team of experts, and proactive compliance trusted by enterprises, governments, and startups. ; Operate hybrid seamlessly · On-premises, across multiple clouds, and at the edge—we’ll meet you where you are. Integrate and manage your environments with services designed for hybrid cloud. ; Build on your terms · With a commitment to open source, and support for all languages and frameworks, build how you want, and deploy where you want to.
Cloud computing is hardware and software resources available via the internet as managed external services that rely on advanced software and high-end networks of servers.
What is cloud computing: Learn how organizations use and benefit from cloud computing, and which types of cloud computing and cloud services are available.
A cloud provider is a company that offers a cloud computing platform, infrastructure, application, or storage services, usually for a fee.
What is a cloud service provider? ; A cloud service provider, or CSP, is a company that offers components of cloud computing -- typically, infrastructure as a service (IaaS), software as a service (SaaS) or platform as a service (PaaS). Cloud service providers use their own data centers and compute resources to host cloud computing-based infrastructure and platform services for customer organizations. Cloud services typically are priced using various pay-as-you-go subscription models. Customers ...
Overview · Why use a cloud service provider? · Choosing your cloud strategy · Why Red Hat?
Software as a service (SaaS) is application software hosted on cloud and used over an internet connection by way of a web browser, mobile app or thin client.
What is platform as a service (PaaS)? ; It does so without the cost, complexity and inflexibility that often comes with building and maintaining platform on premises. The PaaS provider hosts everything—servers, networks, storage, operating system software, databases and development tools—at their data center. Typically, customers can pay a fixed fee to provide a specified amount of resources for a specified number of users, or they can choose "pay-as-you-go" pricing to pay only for the resou...