Drag and Drop Question

Drag and Drop Question
Drag and drop the characteristics of a cloud environment from the left onto the correct examples on the right
Select and Place:


cisco-exams

8 thoughts on “Drag and Drop Question

  1. Correct Answers are:-

    +Multitenancy: One or more clients can be hosted with the same physical or virtual infrastructure
    + Scalability: Resources can be added and removed as needed to support current workload and tasks
    + Workload movement: Tasks can be migrated to different physical locations to increase efficiency or reduce cost
    + On-demand: Resources are dedicated only when necessary instead of on a permanent basis
    + Resiliency: Tasks and data residing on a failed server can be seamlessly migrated to other physical resources

  2. what happened to being able to press next for the next question? this scrolling down stuff is for the birds

  3. On demand: Because you invoke cloud services only when you need them, they are not permanent parts of your IT infrastructure—a significant advantage for cloud use as opposed to internal IT services. With cloud services there is no need to have dedicated resources waiting to be used, as is the case with internal services.
    Resiliency: The resiliency of a cloud service offering can completely isolate the failure of server and storage resources from cloud users. Work is migrated to a different physical resource in the cloud with or without user awareness and intervention.
    Multitenancy: Public cloud services providers often can host the cloud services for multiple users within the same infrastructure. Server and storage isolation may be physical or virtual—depending upon the specific user requirements.
    Workload movement: This characteristic is related to resiliency and cost considerations. Here, cloud-computing providers can migrate workloads across servers—both inside the data center and across data centers (even in a different geographic area). This migration might be necessitated by cost (less expensive to run a workload in a data center in another country based on time of day or power requirements) or efficiency considerations (for example, network bandwidth). A third reason could be regulatory considerations for certain types of workloads.

  4. I think Resiliency and Workload Movement should be swapped. Resiliency has to do with failures whereas simple movement would be more adept to be focused on efficiency or cost reduction.

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