Infrastructure as a Service
IaaS resources are offered as individual services, so enterprises can choose what they need. As the cloud provider manages the infrastructure, businesses can concentrate on installing, configuring, and managing software and keeping their data secure
Top benefits of Fermorite’s Infrastructure as a Service:
Reliability
Enhanced Security
Efficiency
Scalability & Performance
Cost Optimization
boosts productivity
In order to ensure what suits best to your business, Fermorite offers you the eligibility to select among a variety of plans.
Hydrogen
2 Cores
2GB RAM
20GB Storage
2TB Data Transfer
Phosphorus
2 Cores
4GB RAM
20GB Storage
2TB Data Transfer
Calcium
4 Cores
8GB RAM
40GB Storage
5TB Data Transfer
Strontium
4 Cores
16GB RAM
60GB Storage
5TB Data Transfer
Arsenic
8 Cores
32GB RAM
80GB Storage
8TB Data Transfer
Oxygen
12 Cores
64GB RAM
100GB Storage
10TB Data Transfer
That's Infrastructure as a Service !
Migrating your organization’s infrastructure to an IaaS solution helps you reduce maintenance of on-premises data centers, save money on hardware costs, and gain real-time business insights. IaaS solutions give you the flexibility to scale your IT resources up and down on demand. They also help you quickly provision new applications and increase the reliability of your underlying infrastructure.
IaaS lets you bypass the cost and complexity of buying and managing physical servers and datacenter infrastructure. Each resource is offered as a separate service component, and you only pay for a particular resource for as long as you need it. A cloud computing service provider like Fermorite manages the infrastructure, while you purchase, install, configure, and manage your own software—including operating systems, middleware, and applications.
If your organization experiences any of the following, you’re probably a good candidate for IaaS:
- High business growth that outpaces infrastructure capabilities
- Unpredictable spikes in demand for infrastructure services
- Low utilization of existing infrastructure resources
- Large volumes of data that overwhelm on-premises data stores
- Slow response times with on-premises applications
- Application performance limitations due to capacity constraints
- Slow hardware refresh cycles