To better understand Microsoft’s vision for a Cloud OS, start by thinking about how IT has traditionally managed server workloads.
In the early days of Windows Server, you deployed and managed lots of physical servers on-premises.
Each server had to be individually managed, and this meant performing tasks like configuring storage for them, configuring networking, tuning performance, and so on.
Lots of servers meant lots of tasks to perform, and although scripting could automate many of these tasks, such solutions were typically inflexible and difficult to maintain.
To better understand Microsoft’s vision for a Cloud OS, start by thinking about how IT has traditionally managed server workloads.
In the early days of Windows Server, you deployed and managed lots of physical servers on-premises.
Each server had to be individually managed, and this meant performing tasks like configuring storage for them, configuring networking, tuning performance, and so on.
Lots of servers meant lots of tasks to perform, and although scripting could automate many of these tasks, such solutions were typically inflexible and difficult to maintain.
การแปล กรุณารอสักครู่..
