HOTSPOT - For each of the following statements, select Yes if the statement is true. Otherwise, select No. NOTE: Each correct selection is worth one point. Hot Area:
Suggested Answer:
Box 1: No - You cannot add physical servers to the public cloud. You can only deploy virtual servers in the public cloud. You can extend a private cloud by deploying virtual servers in a public cloud. This would create a hybrid cloud.
Box 2: Yes - A hybrid cloud is a combination of a private cloud and public cloud. Therefore, to create a hybrid cloud, you must deploy resources to a public cloud. Box 3: No. It is not true that a private cloud must be disconnected from the Internet. Private clouds can be and most commonly are connected to the Internet. ג€Private cloudג€ means that the physical servers are managed by you. It does not mean that it is disconnected from the Internet. Reference: https://azure.microsoft.com/en-gb/overview/what-are-private-public-hybrid-clouds/
Agree, you can build a hybrid cloud starting by a public cloud and then deploying ressources to private cloud, I think it came up in a previous version.
I agree. You wouldn't be deploying 'Resources' to public cloud. Public cloud already have resources such as Servers, OS. You would be deploying only your code and data.
In case the user Already had Public Cloud only, then if he prepares on-premises servers or Private Cloud, they would be Hybrid.
So...I think No/No/No in this question.
2nd - Tricky one - Still not sure. If you already have public cloud and adding on-prem resources making it hybrid - Answer is No. But you still need to connect somehow your public and private cloud - i.e. VPN or direct MPLS. That connection is also an resource. With that in mind the answer is Yes you still need at least some "connection" resource to be deployed in Public cloud.
What do you think ?
In hybrid you deploy to both public and private cloud. It doesn't say ONLY public but you have to have something deployed in public cloud, otherwise it's just private cloud not hybrid
correct. If you don't have anything in public cloud but just in on prem then it is not hybrid. So you will need to deploy vm or an app, website (anything) in public clod to make it hybrid.
what if you already have one deployed on a public cloud, and you want to deploy another? In this case, it's already hybrid anyway, so I can deploy either in the private or public.
I agree. My assumption based on the statement is that there is no private cloud yet. So it won't be a hybrid if this is deployed only in the public cloud.
A hybrid cloud is a computing environment that uses both public and private clouds in an inter-connected environment. A hybrid cloud environment can be used to allow a private cloud to surge for increased, temporary demand by deploying public cloud resources. Hybrid cloud can be used to provide an extra layer of security. For example, users can flexibly choose which services to keep in public cloud and which to deploy to their private cloud infrastructure.
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/training/modules/describe-cloud-compute/5-define-cloud-models
A hybrid cloud MUST have a public cloud and a private cloud (either on-premises or off-premises)
For scenario 2:
To make use of the SaaS model of Azure cloud using 0365, M365, or Dynamics365, would not require you deploying any "resource" in the public cloud. You only bring your data.
So, if you already have a Private cloud in addition to the above scenario, you'd have an Hybrid cloud (essentially without having deployed any Azure resource).
The caveat is: you would still have to make use of some Azure services though.
I guess Q2 is NO. There are three different ways to deploy cloud services: on a public cloud, private cloud, or hybrid cloud. Which deployment method depends on your business needs.
Source :https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/resources/cloud-computing-dictionary/what-are-private-public-hybrid-clouds.
Ok, I can have a hybrid cloud with private local network and private cloud, leaving the public cloud out of the picture. With other words - public cloud is not a must for hybrid cloud. Is that correct?
I don't undestand why you're those folks yelling here that the question appeared in exam without revealing if you answered correctly, especially when seeing that there's a confusion in the discussion :(
according to microsoft: 'A hybrid cloud is a type of cloud computing that combines on-premises infrastructure—or a private cloud—with a public cloud'
So imo to have a hybrid cloud you must also have a public cloud
ref: https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/resources/cloud-computing-dictionary/what-are-private-public-hybrid-clouds
ok read the sentence again and again, specially this part TO BUILD A HYBRID CLOUD- read that again, you may have something in private cloud or something in public cloud but if you are making hybrid you need some resource on both places- so answer is YES
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