Last December, I was interviewed by Finance and Commerce magazine for an article titled “Tech Toolkit: IT planning for the year ahead.” Part of the article included cloud computing and what companies can do to include the cloud in their businesses. Early the same month, I posted on the technology trends for 2012, and the continued adoption of cloud computing was one of them. The Cloud Standards Customer Council has released its first “Practical Guide to Cloud Computing.” This guide includes nine steps that companies should consider to help integrate the cloud into their businesses. For the most part, the nine steps involve planning, but planning for the cloud is important. Not every application and data set is appropriate for the cloud. Using this planning tool will help inform a company about what cloud services are appropriate for its business.
Home > Technology > Nine Steps to Integrating the Cloud into Your Business
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Steve Baird
Just so you know, I'm all about brands and the law, both professionally and personally. I regularly annoy family and friends in retail stores by focusing on product labels—not to buy the product, but to read the fine print and ask, "Who owns these brands" and "Did they really register those marks?" More...
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Although I wish I could say my path to the law was the result of a lifelong dream or calling, it was more the result mere curiosity and an affinity for leather-bound books. More...
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Having long been told by my parents that I could do or be anything I wanted, I chose at the age of 10 to become an attorney, as it was the career that would most likely lead me to my goal of becoming the first woman POTUS.More...
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Although my initial career path was to be one of the Supremes (not the musically talented ones with platform shoes and sequins, but rather, the nine wearing sensible shoes and pressed black robes in DC), I will likely stay in Minnesota as I have never lived anywhere else. More...
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My law career started on the ice…as a defensive hockey player (we’re not talking professionally…and if I were, I probably wouldn’t have gotten into law). More...
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In hindsight, writing about creativity and the law may have always been in the cards for me. I began training for a career in litigation at an early age by finding ways to disagree with pretty much anyone about pretty much anything. In my longest-running “case,” I argued with my middle school math teacher, Mrs. Jabs, for the better part of four years over whether, even if I got the right answer, I had to show my work to get full credit. More...
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When I was in elementary and middle school, I loved writing short stories. Creativity and imagination seem to come naturally to people when they are young. More...
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I have always considered myself to be a creative person. Full disclosure: I'm not claiming that I've created anything good, merely that I have created things that exist.More...
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