What if you could skip the waiting and cost of buying servers and just start working instantly?
Why cloud over on-premises in AWS - The Real Reasons
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Imagine running a business where you have to buy, set up, and maintain all your own servers and hardware in a building you own. Every time you need more space or power, you must order new machines, wait for delivery, and install them yourself.
This manual way is slow and costly. Hardware can break, updates take time, and you might buy too much or too little capacity. It's hard to grow quickly or handle sudden busy times. Plus, you need experts to fix problems and keep everything safe.
Cloud computing lets you rent computers and storage from big providers like AWS. You can get more or less power instantly, pay only for what you use, and avoid buying or fixing hardware. The cloud provider handles security and updates, so you focus on your work.
Buy servers -> Setup network -> Install software -> Wait weeks
Click to launch server -> Configure in minutes -> Start workingCloud makes it easy to grow, adapt, and innovate fast without heavy upfront costs or delays.
A startup launches a website and suddenly gets thousands of visitors. With cloud, they quickly add more servers to handle the traffic without downtime or buying new hardware.
Manual hardware setup is slow, costly, and hard to scale.
Cloud offers instant resources, pay-as-you-go pricing, and managed maintenance.
This lets businesses grow and respond quickly to change.
Practice
Solution
Step 1: Understand cost and management differences
On-premises servers need buying, setup, and ongoing management which costs time and money.Step 2: Compare with cloud benefits
Cloud removes the need to buy physical servers and handles management, saving money and effort.Final Answer:
Because cloud lets them avoid buying and managing physical servers -> Option BQuick Check:
Cloud saves money and effort [OK]
- Thinking on-premises is always cheaper
- Confusing physical space needs
- Assuming cloud is slower
Solution
Step 1: Review cloud scaling feature
Cloud lets you increase or decrease resources quickly as your needs change.Step 2: Check other options for accuracy
Options A, B, and D are incorrect because cloud does not require buying hardware, on-premises needs internet for remote access, and updates often require manual effort.Final Answer:
Cloud allows easy scaling to match your needs anytime -> Option AQuick Check:
Cloud scaling [OK]
- Thinking cloud needs more hardware
- Believing on-premises is internet-free for remote access
- Assuming on-premises updates are automatic
Solution
Step 1: Understand cloud resource flexibility
Cloud providers allow users to add resources like storage instantly via online tools.Step 2: Contrast with on-premises process
On-premises requires buying and installing hardware, which takes time and may need downtime.Final Answer:
They can quickly increase storage through the cloud provider's console -> Option CQuick Check:
Cloud quick resource increase [OK]
- Confusing cloud with physical hardware buying
- Assuming downtime is needed for cloud scaling
- Thinking cloud scaling takes weeks
Solution
Step 1: Identify remote access requirements
On-premises servers need proper internet connection and configuration to be accessed remotely.Step 2: Evaluate options for correctness
They forgot to connect the server to the internet correctly points to missing internet connection; B and C are false statements; A is unrelated to access issues.Final Answer:
They forgot to connect the server to the internet -> Option DQuick Check:
Remote access needs internet [OK]
- Thinking cloud disallows remote access
- Assuming on-premises remote access is automatic
- Confusing hardware purchase with access issues
Solution
Step 1: Understand traffic scaling needs
A sudden increase in website visitors needs quick resource scaling to avoid slowdowns or crashes.Step 2: Compare cloud and on-premises scaling
Cloud can automatically adjust resources instantly; on-premises needs manual hardware changes which are slow and costly.Step 3: Eliminate incorrect options
Options B, C, and D are incorrect because on-premises is less flexible, cloud does not require buying extra servers upfront, and cloud access is easier.Final Answer:
Cloud can automatically scale resources up or down based on traffic -> Option AQuick Check:
Cloud auto-scaling fits sudden traffic [OK]
- Believing on-premises handles spikes better
- Thinking cloud needs pre-bought servers
- Confusing access ease between cloud and on-premises
