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Cloud Computing
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Cloud computing refers to the delivery of computing services—including storage, processing power, databases, and software—over the internet rather than through local hardware. Students write about it across disciplines such as information technology, business management, computer science, and cybersecurity, reflecting how broadly the technology has reshaped organizational infrastructure. Its academic interest lies in the tension between its practical benefits—scalability, cost reduction, and accessibility—and the significant technical and governance challenges it introduces, particularly around data security and service reliability.

The papers archived on this topic take a range of approaches. Some examine cloud computing historically, tracing its conceptual roots back to mainframe models and following its evolution into modern service architectures. Others focus on specific service providers, comparing business strategies and infrastructure offerings. A strong subset addresses security concerns directly, including insider threats and distributed denial-of-service attacks, while additional papers approach the subject from a management or enterprise strategy angle, analyzing how organizations adopt and govern cloud systems. Literature review and user-satisfaction frameworks also appear, indicating that both technical and behavioral research methods are common.

A strong essay on cloud computing succeeds by committing to a focused thesis rather than surveying the topic broadly. If the paper addresses security, it should specify a threat category—such as data breaches or insider access—and engage with concrete technical or policy-based solutions. Evidence drawn from organizational case studies, service models, or documented attack patterns carries more weight than general claims about industry trends. The most common pitfall is treating cloud computing as uniformly beneficial or uniformly risky; a credible argument acknowledges trade-offs and grounds them in specific contexts.

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Paper Undergraduate
Design Internet-Based Manufacturing System in Oversea Country
Design internet-based manufacturing system for the oversea small manufacturing companies
Paper Masters
Executive Compensation Has Become Both
Executive compensation has become both a contentious issues throughout America. The financial crisis only exacerbated this issue by delving deep into the proponent of executive compensation.
Paper Doctorate
Cloud computing's impact on society
The paper looks at the concept of technology and how it influences the way we conduct our daily businesses. It focuses on cloud computing in particular and how this technological advancement has had an impact on the contemporary society. Among the covered impacts are privacy, ubiquity, economy, reduced waste, developmental aspects and even the effect on individuals.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Federal Cloud Computing Strategy: The 25-Point IT Reform Plan
This paper addresses the issue of cloud computing. The only source used is a government policy document that conveys information on cloud computing from the standpoint of reforming federal information technology. The "cloud first" policy discussed here will, allegedly, help the federal government move toward standardization and adoption of cloud computing.
Thesis Undergraduate
Leadership Priorities and Practice in Organizational Management
The enterprise software industry is going through a series of disruptive innovations that are disrupting the economics of the industry while also shifting the balance of power away from the Chief Information Officer (CIO) to the line-of-business leaders including the Vice Presidents, General Managers and Directors of Business Units. As this balance of power shifts throughout enterprise software, many long-standing approaches to developing, delivering, monetizing, and supporting software are also changing. One of the most successful companies in the enterprise software industry, specifically in the Aerospace and Defense sector, is Cincom Systems. Cincom has been able to attain a highly profitable business model by creating very customized systems for customers' needs while at the same time creating maintenance agreements that ensuring highly profitable recurring revenue stream over the long-term. This strategy has been largely responsible for the company's ability to withstand the recurring recession globally that has occurred over the last five years. It has also given Cincom Systems, which is privately-held, a strong foundation for investing in new technologies and accelerating their Research & Development (R&D) spending as well. The one significant organizational challenge the company faces today is transitioning from its primarily on-premise platform to a Cloud-based one, specifically on the Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) architecture that the majority of its competitors are using today. The economics of Cloud Computing and SaaS specifically are completely reordering the competitive landscape of the enterprise software market and pose a very significant threat to Cincom over the long-term. There are many challenges that Cincom must overcome to deal with this shift in product strategy, and will also have a corresponding impact on their overall financials and profitability. The intent of this paper is to analyze and explain how Cincom can rely on leadership theories to overcome these challenges and capitalize on them over the long-term.
Essay Doctorate
Cloud Computing Assessing the Risks of Cloud
Despite the many economic advantages of cloud computing, there are just as many risks, both at the information technologies (IT) and strategic level for any enterprise looking to integrate them into their operations. The intent of this analysis is to evaluate three of the top risks of cloud computing and provide prescriptive analysis and insight into how best to manage each. Despite widespread skepticism of cloud computing with many Chief Information Officers (CIOs) and senior executives, its value continues to re-define the enterprise software industry with projections of between 17% to 22% growth through 2015, becoming a $15B segment of the software industry (Blumenthal, 2011). The three top risks of cloud computing include data security and access, data segregation, and regulatory auditing and compliance (Blumenthal, 2011). As many cloud computing platforms are on open source-based operating systems including Linux, security is exacerbated by the reliance on low-cost, often highly egalitarian-designed platforms (Aslam, Ullah, Ansari, 2010).
Research Paper Undergraduate
Cyber Security Cloud Computing
A recent cyber security threat involves a Monster.Com US online recruitment site reported in 2008 that hackers broke into using password-protected resume library. They used credentials stolen from some of its clients. The hackers successfully managed to infiltrate the confidentiality of the victims of the scam. The security of the victims data was then jeopardized as the hackers demanded payment or otherwise the delete all the data from the victims' database. Employing cloud-based computing essentially eliminates large up-front licensing and server costs and the eventual reduction in the costs associated with consultation and installation of the servers.
Paper Undergraduate
Digital forensics principles and applications
This essay examines the most important development in digital forensics. The cloud was chosen in this essay as the most important aspect in this field today. The essay examined the important aspects of the cloud and how they relate to this problem of forensics. Literature is used to support this claim and the essay concludes with recommendations on how to make this technology more practical .
Paper Undergraduate
Enterprise architecture frameworks and implementation strategies
Re-aligning the economics of enterprise software, Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) is changing the nature of how enterprise application architectures are planned, deployed and managed in organizations globally. SaaS is the application delivery layer of the broader cloud computing protocol stack that includes Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) at its base, followed by Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) at the midpoint. SaaS is at the top level of the cloud computing architecture, providing Application Programmer Interface (API) support for user and machine interfaces (Beimborn, Miletzki, Wenzel, 2011). When the term cloud computing is used, it refers to this entire protocol stack. Enterprises are increasingly reliant on cloud computing due to the cost advantages over traditional enterprise applications. Foremost among the many economic factors favoring cloud computing, the nascent business models in SaaS-based application deployment support a wide spectrum of operating expense (OPEX) based pricing and payment approaches including usage-based pricing (Bala, Carr, 2010). These payment models are re-ordering the enterprise application landscape, a key finding from the research presented in this analysis. How SaaS Economics Are Re-Ordering Enterprise Software
Paper Doctorate
Data Center Life Cycle Management: Virtualization & Security
¶ … centre can be described as a "…computer system's most important and vulnerable component" (What is a Data Center?). In simple terms, a data center is a physical area which houses and contains the computer networks…