Other than cost savings realized due to measured service, what is another facet of cloud computing that will typically save substantial costs in time and money for an organization in the event of a disaster?
Suggested Answer:A🗳️
With a typical BCDR solution, an organization would need some number of staff to quickly travel to the location of the BCDR site to configure systems and applications for recovery. With a cloud environment, everything is done over broad network access, with no need (or even possibility) to travel to a remote site at any time.
Resource pooling in cloud computing allows multiple customers (tenants) to share a common pool of computing resources (e.g., storage, processing, memory, network bandwidth) dynamically allocated based on demand.
In the event of a disaster, resource pooling enables organizations to quickly access and scale up resources in the cloud without needing to invest in additional hardware or maintain expensive on-premises infrastructure. This elasticity and rapid provisioning save significant time and money during disaster recovery.
In the event of a disaster, resource pooling enables rapid and flexible reallocation of resources to maintain business continuity, leading to substantial cost savings in both time and money.
Disaster is not defined. Broad Network access would be more valuable in situations where a disaster impacts the office space and data center, forcing users to disperse .
Broad network access, it eliminates the need for having either a second place of operations or having to lease it from a third party when there's a disaster. Both are very costly and are eliminated when people can work from anywhere.
It depends on the type of disaster, but 'broad network access' is probably the best answer here. If your premises has to shut down (e.g. Covid!) then you can still access your services from a backup location (e.g. from my bed!).
I would have chosen Rapid elasticity, but the nearest choice is Resource pooling.
Resource pooling-- is an IT term used in cloud computing environments to describe a situation in which providers serve multiple clients, customers or "tenants" with provisional and scalable services. These services can be adjusted to suit each client's needs without any changes being apparent to the client or end-user
Broad network access is something that, in a way, goes against the idea of a private cloud. However, as more employees use smartphones, tablets and other devices with online connectivity, they want to access company resources and continue to work from these devices.
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