That's funny. I thought that was a key sentence to
Post# of 32646
The problem in the health care industry is most of the data is PII and confidential information. The EU is very sensitive on this and countries like Germany even more so. No way either are going to have your health data sprinkled across the internet. No way. Not in my lifetime.
With edge computing, that changes things. Fixes some of those challenges. Every time I deal with a company in the cloud, I have to have guarantees of where that data sits. Legal will have it no other way.
Not easy to guarantee when you want your global company to use one app, but you want the data to sit in multiple countries. When I had conversations in the past with Google as an example, your data is spread like a raid controller across multiple data center instead of disks.
OK, where are those data centers.
We can't tell you.
Well, you can tell me, but you don't want to.
No, we can't tell you where the data ends up. It's designed that way for redundancy and security.
Google used to not let people know where their data centers were. I don't know if that is still the case and haven't looked.
Edge computing is critical in the health care industry.
Where nFusz is hosting will give clues as to what's to come.
Quote:
The key here is this sentence from the article: "With Azure Machine Learning service, you can quickly and easily build, train, and deploy machine learning models anywhere from the intelligent cloud to the intelligent edge."