• Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

Digi Skills Agency

  • Digital Skills Training
    • Digital Life Skills
    • Digital Employability Skills
    • Digital Work Skills
  • Digital Support Services
    • Digital Badges
    • E-Learning
    • Digitise Your Content
    • Inhouse & Fully Mobile Training Unit
    • Bespoke Training Development & Delivery
    • Guest Speakers & Career Advice
  • About
    • About Us
    • Work With Us
    • Testimonials
  • Blog
  • Contact
You are here: Home / Archives for hardware

hardware

A Guide to IT Infrastructure / Cloud Computing

June 4, 2016 by Julie McGrath

What is Cloud Computing?

Cloud Infrastructure refers to the hardware and software components — such as servers, storage, networking and virtualization software — that are needed to support the computing requirements of a cloud computing model. In addition, cloud infrastructures include a software abstraction layer that virtualizes resources and logically presents them to users through programmatic means.

In cloud computing, virtualized resources are hosted by a service provider or IT department and delivered to users over a network or the Internet. These resources include virtual machines and components such as servers, compute, memory, network switches, firewalls, load balancers and storage.

In a cloud computing architecture, which refers to the front end and back end of a cloud computing environment, cloud infrastructure consists of the back end components.

Cloud infrastructure is present in each of the three main cloud computing models — infrastructure as a service (IaaS), platform as a service (PaaS) and software as a service (SaaS). Together, these three models form what’s often called a cloud computing stack, with IaaS as the foundation, PaaS as the middle layer, and SaaS as the top layer.

Businesses use cloud infrastructures to run their applications. Unlike subscription-based pricing models, or payment structures that enable users to subscribe to vendor services for a set price, cloud infrastructures are typically purchased using a pay-per-use model. In a pay-per-usage model, users only pay for the services consumed — generally on an hourly, weekly or monthly basis.

Rather than purchase cloud infrastructure from a provider, businesses can also build cloud infrastructures on-premises. When cloud providers maintain the cloud infrastructure, the environment is a public cloud. When the organization using cloud maintains the cloud infrastructure, the environment is a private cloud. And when both the cloud provider and user own pieces of the cloud infrastructure, the environment is a hybrid cloud.

If you are already familiar with all this information then be sure to check out our latest job which offers the opportunity to join a business with sky high performance results and infrastructure solutions.

– Techtarget

Filed Under: Latest Industry News Tagged With: Cloud, Computing, hardware, Infrastructure, IT, NETWORKING, Software, virtualization

What is ‘Rugged’ Technology?

June 3, 2016 by Julie McGrath

What is Rugged Technology?

Rugged Technology

Rugged Technology is a marketing term for hardware that is designed to operate in extremely harsh environments and conditions. There are three generally accepted levels of ruggedization:semi-rugged, fully-rugged and ultra-rugged. The levels describe a product’s ability to survive drops, vibration, dust, immersion and extreme temperatures.

Semi-rugged devices, which are increasingly being called business-rugged by marketers, are usually enhanced versions of commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) hardware. The components are the same, but they are protected better.  For example, a semi-rugged laptop might have a thicker case, a gel-mounted hard disk drive and a spill-resistant keyboard. Fully-ruggeddevices are designed from the inside-out to work in extreme temperatures, to be impervious to being dropped, to resist shocks and vibrations and to be dustproof and waterproof. A fully-rugged laptop may have a solid state hard drive, which has no moving parts, runs cool and doesn’t need for a fan. (another moving part that adds weight to the device.)  Ultra-rugged devices, which are usually designed to meet precise specifications for military use, are made to handle the harshest environmental conditions. An ultra-rugged laptop can be left out in a sandstorm, frozen in a blizzard or sent on a vibrating rocket into space without any detrimental effects. 

If you already know this information then why not check out our latest new job where your mission will be to assist organisations optimise their mobile productivity with rugged technology that can enable C4I.

– whatis.techtarget.com

Filed Under: Latest Industry News Tagged With: computers, hardware, IT, rugged, smartphones, tablets, technology

Footer

What we do

We provide the digital skills and confidence you need for life, employability and work.

Subscribe to our newsletter

    Services

    • Digital Skills Training
    • Digital Life Skills
    • Digital Employability Skills
    • Digital Work Skills
    • Digital Support Services
    • Digital Badges
    • e-Learning
    • Digitise Your Content
    • Inhouse & Fully Mobile Training Unit
    • Bespoke Training Development & Delivery
    • Guest Speakers & Career Advice

    Explore

    • Home
    • Work With Us
    • About Us
    • Testimonials
    • Blog
    • Privacy Policy
    • Contact Us

    Connect

    hello@digiskills.agency
    0330 223 6994

    © 2025 Digi Skills Agency Ltd. All rights reserved. Sitemap

    Website Design by Yellow Marshmallow.