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{{distinguish|Utility software}}
{{
{{short description|Service provisioning model}}
'''Utility computing''', or '''
This repackaging of computing services became the foundation of the shift to "[[Code on demand|on demand]]" computing, [[software as a service]] and [[cloud computing]] models that further propagated the idea of computing, application and network as a service.
There was some initial skepticism about such a significant shift.<ref>{{citation | publisher=ZD Net | url=
IBM, HP and Microsoft were early leaders in the new field of utility computing, with their business units and researchers working on the architecture, payment and development challenges of the new computing model. Google, Amazon and others started to take the lead in 2008, as they established their own utility services for computing, storage and applications.
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The term "[[grid computing]]" is often used to describe a particular form of distributed computing, where the supporting nodes are geographically distributed or cross [[administrative ___domain]]s. To provide utility computing services, a company can "bundle" the resources of members of the public for sale, who might be paid with a portion of the revenue from clients.
One model, common among [[volunteer computing]] applications, is for a central server to dispense tasks to participating nodes, on the behest of approved end-users (in the commercial case, the paying customers). Another model, sometimes called the [[
The definition of "utility computing" is sometimes extended to specialized tasks, such as [[web service]]s.
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Utility computing merely means "Pay and Use", with regards to computing power.
Utility computing is not a new concept, but rather has quite a long history. Among the earliest references is:
{{cquote|If computers of the kind I have advocated become the computers of the future, then computing may someday be organized as a public utility just as the telephone system is a public utility... The computer utility could become the basis of a new and important industry.|author=[[John McCarthy (computer scientist)|John McCarthy]]|source=speaking at the MIT Centennial in 1961<ref>{{cite book|title=Architects of the Information Society, Thirty-Five Years of the Laboratory for Computer Science at MIT|editor1-first=Hal|editor1-last=Abelson|first1=Simson|last1=Garfinkel|isbn=978-0-262-07196-3|publisher=MIT Press|year=1999|page=1|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Fc7dkLGLKrcC&pg=RA1-PA1|___location=Cambridge}}</ref>}}
IBM and other mainframe providers conducted this kind of business in the following two decades, often referred to as time-sharing, offering computing power and database storage to banks and other large organizations from their worldwide data centers. To facilitate this business model, mainframe operating systems evolved to include process control facilities, security, and user metering. The advent of mini computers changed this business model, by making computers affordable to almost all companies. As Intel and AMD increased the power of PC architecture servers with each new generation of processor, data centers became filled with thousands of servers.
In the late
In spring 2006
== See also ==
* [[Cloud computing]]
* [[Edge computing]]
* [[
==References==
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==External links==
*[http://communication.howstuffworks.com/utility-computing.htm How Utility Computing Works] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080627130429/http://communication.howstuffworks.com/utility-computing.htm |date=2008-06-27 }}
*[http://www.techopedia.com/definition/14622/utility-computing Utility computing definition]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Utility Computing}}
[[Category:Business computing]]
[[Category:Business models]]
[[Category:Computer systems]]
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