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  2. Cloud testing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloud_testing

    Cloud testing is often seen as only performance or load tests, however, as discussed earlier it covers many other types of testing. Cloud computing itself is often referred to as the marriage of software as a service (SaaS) and utility computing. In regard to test execution, the software offered as a service may be a transaction generator and ...

  3. Testbed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Testbed

    A testbed (also spelled test bed) is a platform for conducting rigorous, transparent, and replicable testing of scientific theories, computing tools, and new technologies. The term is used across many disciplines to describe experimental research and new product development platforms and environments.

  4. CloudSim - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CloudSim

    CloudSim is a framework for modeling and simulation of cloud computing infrastructures and services. [1] Originally built primarily at the Cloud Computing and Distributed Systems (CLOUDS) Laboratory, [2] the University of Melbourne, Australia, CloudSim has become one of the most popular open source [citation needed] cloud simulators in the research and academia.

  5. 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 ]

  6. Knowledge as a service - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knowledge_as_a_service

    Knowledge as a service (KaaS) is a computing service that delivers information to users, backed by a knowledge model, which might be drawn from a number of possible models based on decision trees, association rules, or neural networks. [1]

  7. Presto (SQL query engine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Presto_(SQL_query_engine)

    Presto (including PrestoDB, and PrestoSQL which was re-branded to Trino) is a distributed query engine for big data using the SQL query language. Its architecture allows users to query data sources such as Hadoop, Cassandra, Kafka, AWS S3, Alluxio, MySQL, MongoDB and Teradata, [1] and allows use of multiple data sources within a query.

  8. Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amazon_Elastic_Compute_Cloud

    Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) is a part of Amazon's cloud-computing platform, Amazon Web Services (AWS), that allows users to rent virtual computers on which to run their own computer applications.

  9. Cloud computing architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloud_computing_architecture

    This is the equivalent to infrastructure and hardware in the traditional (non-cloud computing) method running in the cloud. In other words, businesses pay a fee (monthly or annually) to run virtual servers, networks, storage from the cloud. This will mitigate the need for a data center, heating, cooling, and maintaining hardware at the local level.