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  2. Grid computing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grid_computing

    “Distributed” or “grid” computing in general is a special type of parallel computing that relies on complete computers (with onboard CPUs, storage, power supplies, network interfaces, etc.) connected to a network (private, public or the Internet) by a conventional network interface producing commodity hardware, compared to the lower efficiency of designing and constructing a small ...

  3. Dynamic infrastructure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dynamic_Infrastructure

    Dynamic infrastructures also provide the fundamental business continuity and high availability requirements to facilitate cloud or grid computing. For networking companies, infrastructure 2.0 refers to the ability of networks to keep up with the movement and scale requirements of new enterprise IT initiatives, especially virtualization and ...

  4. Cloud computing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloud_computing

    Cloud bursting is an application deployment model in which an application runs in a private cloud or data center and "bursts" to a public cloud when the demand for computing capacity increases. A primary advantage of cloud bursting and a hybrid cloud model is that an organization pays for extra compute resources only when they are needed. [ 68 ]

  5. European Grid Infrastructure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Grid_Infrastructure

    Originally, EGI stood for European Grid Infrastructure. This reflected its focus on providing access to high-throughput computing resources across Europe using Grid computing techniques. However, as EGI's service offerings expanded beyond traditional grid computing, particularly with the incorporation of federated cloud services, the original ...

  6. Open Grid Services Architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_Grid_Services...

    Software components that adhere to the OGSA specifications and profiles, enabling deployment of grid solutions that are interoperable even though they may be based on implementations from multiple sources. The Open Grid Services Architecture, Version 1.5 described these capabilities: [3] Infrastructure services; Execution Management services

  7. Grid network - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grid_network

    Layout of a grid low-voltage network. A grid network is a computer network consisting of a number of computer systems connected in a grid topology. In a regular grid topology, each node in the network is connected with two neighbors along one or more dimensions. If the network is one-dimensional, and the chain of nodes is connected to form a ...

  8. Utility computing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utility_computing

    Utility computing, or computer utility, is a service provisioning model in which a service provider makes computing resources and infrastructure management available to the customer as needed, and charges them for specific usage rather than a flat rate. Like other types of on-demand computing (such as grid computing), the utility model seeks to ...

  9. Talk:Grid computing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Grid_computing

    The differences lies in the topology: grid computing is Distributed Computing over a matrix of computers, Cloud Computing is another form of distributed computing where nodes are more loosely coupled, you could also have distributed computing involving rings or bus of computer networks, etc, and these topologies can be virtually assigned via ...