Cloud Architecture | News, how-tos, features, reviews, and videos
An enterprise cloud revolution is coming in 2025, and there will be winners and losers. Here’s your practical blueprint for success.
Finops uses cloud units to connect cloud costs with business value. But applying a simple and generic metric to complex and unique business uses leaves me with a lot of questions.
Cloud providers waste a lot of their customers’ cloud dollars, but enterprises can take action.
Workloads in the cloud and workloads on premises are both reasonable choices. Enterprises are about evenly split between the two.
Unsustainable demands for AI are on the horizon. People will soon have to stop fake-caring about cloud sustainability and give a damn for real.
In some countries, the government is attempting to regulate cloud computing, and cloud providers are suing each other over competition and lock-in. Where does that leave enterprises?
How many enterprises are revisiting on-premises solutions in a cloud-dominated era for better cost management, security, and performance?
Companies think their only choices are repatriation or complaining about the high costs of the public cloud. There's a third option, but it takes work.
Companies suffer when cloud computing architects are not directly aligned with their business's overall goals. Let’s readjust our perspectives from purely technical.
We seem to have lost our ability to build efficient cloud systems, resulting in billions of dollars of lost business value. We need to find that metric again and find it now.