TY - BOOK AU - Antonopoulos,Nikolaos AU - Gillam,Lee TI - Cloud computing: Principles, Systems and Applications / T2 - Computer communications and networks SN - 9781849962407 U1 - 004.6782 23 PY - 2010/// CY - London PB - Springer, KW - Computación en la nube KW - UNESCO KW - Internet KW - Almacenamiento KW - Medidas de seguridad N1 - Part 1. Cloud base. 1. Tools and technologies for building clouds. -- 2. A taxonomy, survey, and issues of cloud computing ecosystems. -- 3. Towards a taxonomy for cloud computing from an e-science perspective. -- 4. Examining cloud computing from the perspective of grid and computer-supported cooperative work. -- 5. Overview of cloud standards. -- Part II. Cloud seeding. -- 6. Open and interoperable clouds: the cloud@home way. -- 7. A peer-to-peer framework for supporting MapReduce applications in dynamic cloud environments. -- 8. Enhanced network support for scalable computing clouds. -- 9. YML-PC: a reference architecture based on workflow for building scientific private clouds. -- 10: An efficient framework for running applications on clusters, grids, and clouds. -- 11. Resource management for hybrid grid and cloud computing. -- 12. Peer-to-peer cloud provisioning: service discovery and load-balancing. -- 13. Mixing grids and clouds: high-throughput science using the Nimrod tool family. --Part III. Cloud breaks. -- 14. Cloud compliance: a framework for using cloud computing in a regulated world. -- 15. Cloud computing: data confidentiality and interoperability challenges. -- 16. Security issues to cloud computing. -- 17. Securing the cloud. -- Part IV. Cloud feedback. 18. Technologies for enforcement and distribution of policy in cloud architectures. -- 19. The PRISM on-demand digital media cloud. -- 20. Cloud economics: principles, costs, and benefits. -- 21. Towards application-specific service level agreements: experiments in clouds and grids N2 - Cloud computing continues to emerge as a subject of substantial industrial and academic interest. Although the meaning and scope of “cloud computing” continues to be debated, the current notion of clouds blurs the distinctions between grid services, web services, and data centers, among other areas. Clouds also bring considerations of lowering the cost for relatively bursty applications to the fore. ER -