Healthcare providers turn to the cloud for increased compliance
As healthcare providers continue to work toward the mandatory transition from physical to electronic health records, many groups are turning to the cloud for data storage solutions.
As healthcare providers continue to work toward the mandatory transition from physical to electronic health records, many groups are turning to the cloud for data storage solutions.
Over the last three years, the SEC has taken steps to upgrade its technology infrastructure and has recently begun moving programs and operations to the cloud.
The fourth annual Future of Cloud Computing Survey was released this week and examined what drives and inhibits companies when it comes to cloud adoption.
As the importance of data collection continues to grow, so too will the need for enterprise cloud platforms increase.
In the past few years, capital market adoption of cloud services has increased greatly and the use of private clouds seems to be favored.
The Transportation Security Administration is looking for suggestions from cloud providers on how their services could support the agency’s employee systems.
Cloud technology is being used across the entire finance sector, and organizations are particularly favoring private cloud solutions.
There are many different options available when it comes to choosing an enterprise cloud solution, and it can be difficult to know which one is right for a particular organization, but private cloud platforms are almost always the best bet.
A private enterprise cloud solution provides the same ease of access and ability to share information as public platforms while dramatically decreasing the likelihood of a data breach.
Dedicated private clouds offer greater security and network access, as well as faster deployment and lower costs than public cloud platforms.