Originally posted by NickStone
View Post
* Service level agreements. Customers are paying for service; if something becomes unavailable, the provider loses money.
* Many connection points. Large cloud providers have hundreds of Internet connection points. Most businesses have redundant connections and design their networks for common failure scenarios.
* Offline usability. In today's business environment, you have connectivity almost all the time. For those rare occasions when you don't, good cloud services can stream content and applications to local devices. This is a feature of Office 365, for instance. And as Microsoft makes improvements to Office, those improvements are trickled down to your PC in the background. You never need to perform a forklift upgrade again.
Extend the above notion to servers. Many months ago, Microsoft updated Exchange Online from Exchange 2010 to Exchange 2013. Most customers didn't even notice. And yet one day, voila -- new features in your subscription.
Originally posted by NickStone
View Post
Now, why does the guy who runs his own Postfix server and ownCloud instance make the above recommendation? Because I don't trust the "free" (scare quotes intentional) services. I'm not the customer, I'm the product. Why don't I use a commercial cloud service? I'm a cheap bastard and I love tinkering with servers. J. Random User should never, ever, look at /etc/postfix/main.cf!
Originally posted by NickStone
View Post
Comment