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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. Foxconn Industrial Internet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foxconn_Industrial_Internet

    Foxconn Industrial Internet Co., Ltd. (Fii; Chinese: 富士康工业互联网; pinyin: Fùshìkāng Gōngyè Hùliánwǎng) is a publicly listed company that engages in the manufacture and sale of electrical equipment that includes telecommunications equipment, cloud computing equipment, precision tools and industrial robots.

  5. Fabric computing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fabric_computing

    While the term has been in use since the mid to late 1990s [2] the growth of cloud computing and Cisco's evangelism of unified data center fabrics followed by unified computing (an evolutionary data center architecture whereby blade servers are integrated or unified with supporting network and storage infrastructure) starting March 2009 has renewed interest in the technology.

  6. Supercomputer architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supercomputer_architecture

    Example architecture of a geographically disperse computing system connecting many nodes over a network. Grid computing uses a large number of computers in distributed, diverse administrative domains. It is an opportunistic approach which uses resources whenever they are available. [10] An example is BOINC a volunteer-based, opportunistic grid ...

  7. List of grid computing projects - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_grid_computing...

    OurGrid aims to deliver grid technology that can be used today by current users to solve present problems. To achieve this goal, it uses a different trade-off compared to most grid projects: it forfeits supporting arbitrary applications in favor of supporting only bag-of-tasks applications. ScottNet NCG – A distributed neural computing grid.

  8. Open Grid Forum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_Grid_Forum

    Open Grid Services Architecture (OGSA) describes a service-oriented architecture grid computing environment for business and scientific use. DRMAA : Distributed Resource Management Application API is a high-level application programming interface specification for the submission and control of jobs to one or more distributed resource management ...

  9. Sky computing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sky_computing

    Sky computing is a paradigm that aims to develop cloud computing model further. It aims to combine existing clouds of different service providers into a comprehensive, interoperable sky. The concept behind sky computing is to create a cloud of clouds that behaves in a similar way to the internet, which consists of a network of networks.