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IBM Cloud (formerly IBM Bluemix and IBM SoftLayer)

By Kathleen Casey

What is IBM Cloud?

IBM Cloud is a suite of cloud computing services from IBM that offers both platform as a service (PaaS) and infrastructure as a service (IaaS).

Why is IBM Cloud used?

With IBM Cloud IaaS, organizations can deploy and access virtualized IT resources -- such as compute power, storage and networking -- over the internet. For compute, organizations can choose between bare-metal or virtual servers.

With IBM Cloud PaaS -- which is based on the open source cloud platform Cloud Foundry -- developers can use IBM services to create, manage, run and deploy various types of applications for the public cloud, as well as for local or on-premises environments. IBM Cloud supports various programming languages, such as Java, Node.js, PHP and Python and extends to support other languages.

IBM Cloud products and services

IBM Cloud platform supports access to other IBM tools and services -- including IBM Watson and IBM Cloud Functions for serverless computing -- as well as those from third-party vendors.

IBM Cloud features

There are a number of IBM cloud services that are a part of the IBM cloud. These services are grouped into 16 categories:

IBM Cloud deployment models

IBM offers three deployment models for its cloud platform:

  1. Public: A public cloud that provides access to virtual servers in a multi-tenant environment. An enterprise can choose to deploy its applications in one or multiple geographical regions.
  2. Dedicated: A single-tenant private cloud that IBM hosts in one of its data centers. An enterprise can connect to the environment using a direct network connection or VPN, and IBM manages the platform.
  3. IBM Cloud Private: A version of the IBM platform that an organization deploys as a private cloud in its own data center behind a firewall.

IBM Cloud pricing

The exact cost of IBM Cloud varies depending on resource usage, deployment model, support and other factors. As of 2022, IBM offers two main pricing models. Those who signed up for a lite account prior to October 25, 2021 are able to keep that account, but all new accounts are automatically created as pay-as-you-go plans.

IBM's pay-as-you-go accounts are based on monthly consumption. IBM bills its subscribers based on the resources that they use.

The other type of account that is available is a subscription account. A subscription account is similar to a pay-as-you-go account but require organizations to commit to a minimal amount of spending. IBM offers discounted pricing for its services based on the monthly spending commitment, with larger commitments earning bigger discounts.

To better estimate costs, organizations have access to the IBM Cloud pricing calculator.

For more on public cloud, read the following articles:

Public vs. private vs. hybrid cloud: Key differences defined

Choose the right on-premises-to-cloud migration method

Breaking Down the Cost of Cloud Computing

Top 10 cloud computing careers of 2023 and how to get started

Top 23 cloud computing skills to boost your career

IBM Cloud rebranding and competitors

In 2013, IBM acquired SoftLayer, a public cloud platform, to serve as the foundation for its IaaS offering. In October 2016, IBM rolled the SoftLayer brand under its Bluemix brand of PaaS offerings, giving users access to both IaaS and PaaS resources from a single console. In October 2017, IBM then rebranded its entire cloud portfolio as IBM Cloud.

IBM's main competitors in the cloud computing market include AWS, Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud Platform.

29 Mar 2022

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