Last week I did something that I didn’t have for a while. I recommended a cloud service on a bare metal customer. They had a specific purpose and it was the right technology to solve the problem.
In a typical public cloud environment, most users interact with virtual machines that are instances of the operating system running at the peak of physical hardware. These virtual computers are separated from OneThere via a hypervisor that allows multiple users to safely and efficiently share the same hardware. However, this abstraction represents performance directing and limits user control over the physical sources of the server.
On the other hand, bare metal cloud services provide users exclusive access to the base hardware of the physical server: no hypervisor, no virtual machines, no other abstraction. This cleanliness means complete access to calculation, such as CPU, GPU and memory sources, without added latency or limiting virtualization. Basically, the clouds of bare metal clouds span the gap between the flexibility of cloud computing and the robust performance of dedicated On-Premis servers.