History of Cloud Computing
Categories: Cloud Computing
History of Cloud Computing
EARLY 1960S
Computer scientist John McCarthy has a time-sharing concept that allows the organization touse an expensive mainframe at the same time. This machine is described as a majorcontribution to Internet development, and as a leader in cloud computing.
IN 1969
J.C.R. Licklider, responsible for the creation of the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPANET), proposed the idea of an "Intergalactic Computer Network" or "Galactic Network" (a computer networking term similar to today’s Internet). His vision was to connect everyone around the world and access programs and data from anywhere.
IN 1970
Usage of tools such as VMware for virtualization. More than one operating system can be run in a separate environment simultaneously. In a different operating system it was possible to operate a completely different computer (virtual machine).
IN 1997
Prof Ramnath Chellappa in Dallas in 1997 seems to be the first known definition of "cloud computing," "a paradigm in which computing boundaries are defined solely on economic rather than technical limits alone."
IN 1999
Salesforce.com was launched in 1999 as the pioneer of delivering client applications through its simple website. The services firm has been able to provide applications via the Internet for both the specialist and mainstream software companies.
IN 2003
This first public release of Xen ,is a software system that enables multiple virtual guest operating systems to be run simultaneous on a single machine, which also known as the Virtual Machine Monitor ( VMM) as a hypervisor.
IN 2006
The Amazon cloud service was launched in 2006. First, its Elastic Compute Cloud ( EC2) allowed people to use their own cloud applications and to access computers. Simple Storage Service (S3) was then released. This incorporated the user-as-you-go model and has become the standard procedure for both users and the industry as a whole.
IN 2013
A total of £ 78 billion in the world 's market for public cloud services was increased by 18.5% in 2012, with IaaS as one of the fastest growing services on the market.
IN 2014
Global business spending for cloud-related technology and services is estimated to be £ 103.8 billion in 2014, up 20% from 2013 (Constellation Research).