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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Products  



1.1  Compute  





1.2  Storage and databases  





1.3  Networking  





1.4  Big data  





1.5  Cloud AI  





1.6  Management tools  





1.7  Identity and security  





1.8  Internet of things (IoT)  





1.9  API platform  







2 Regions and zones  





3 Similarity to services by other cloud service providers  





4 Timeline  





5 Public Customers  





6 See also  





7 References  





8 External links  














Google Cloud Platform






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from Google Cloud Functions)

Google Cloud Platform
OwnerGoogle
CEOThomas Kurian
IndustryWeb service, cloud computing
RevenueIncrease US$33.1 billion (2023)[1]
Operating incomeIncrease US$1.72 billion (2023)[1]
URLcloud.google.com
LaunchedApril 7, 2008; 16 years ago (2008-04-07)
Current statusActive
Written in
  • C++
  • Python
  • Go
  • Ruby
  • Google Cloud Platform (GCP) is a suite of cloud computing services offered by Google that provides a series of modular cloud services including computing, data storage, data analytics, and machine learning, alongside a set of management tools.[2] It runs on the same infrastructure that Google uses internally for its end-user products, such as Google Search, Gmail, and Google Docs, according to Verma et al.[3] Registration requires a credit card or bank account details.[4]

    Google Cloud Platform provides infrastructure as a service, platform as a service, and serverless computing environments.

    In April 2008, Google announced App Engine, a platform for developing and hosting web applications in Google-managed data centers, which was the first cloud computing service from the company. The service became generally available in November 2011. Since the announcement of App Engine, Google added multiple cloud services to the platform.

    Google Cloud Platform is a part[5]ofGoogle Cloud, which includes the Google Cloud Platform public cloud infrastructure, as well as Google Workspace (G Suite), enterprise versions of Android and ChromeOS, and application programming interfaces (APIs) for machine learning and enterprise mapping services.

    Products

    [edit]
    Conference presentation on Google Container Engine/Kubernetes

    Google lists over 100 products under the Google Cloud brand. Some of the key services are listed below.

    Compute

    [edit]

    Storage and databases

    [edit]

    Networking

    [edit]

    Big data

    [edit]

    Cloud AI

    [edit]

    Management tools

    [edit]

    Identity and security

    [edit]

    Internet of things (IoT)

    [edit]

    API platform

    [edit]

    Regions and zones

    [edit]

    A region is a specific geographical location where users can deploy cloud resources. Each region is an independent geographic area that consists of zones.

    A zone is a deployment area for Google Cloud Platform resources within a region. Zones should be considered a single failure domain within a region. Most regions have three zones.

    As of Q1 2024, Google Cloud Platform is available in 40 regions and 121 zones. This is a list of those regions and zones:[41][42]

    GCP Regions & Zones
    Region Name Launch Date Location Zones
    us-west1 2016-Q3 The Dalles, Oregon, US
    • us-west1-a
    • us-west1-b
    • us-west1-c
    us-west2 2018-Q3 Los Angeles, California, US
    • us-west2-a
    • us-west2-b
    • us-west2-c
    us-west3 2020-Q1 Salt Lake City, Utah, US
    • us-west3-a
    • us-west3-b
    • us-west3-c
    us-west4 2020-Q2 Las Vegas, Nevada, US
    • us-west4-a
    • us-west4-b
    • us-west4-c
    us-central1[43] 2009 Council Bluffs, Iowa, US
    • us-central1-a
    • us-central1-b
    • us-central1-c
    • us-central1-f
    us-east1 2015-Q4 Moncks Corner, South Carolina, US
    • us-east1-b
    • us-east1-c
    • us-east1-d
    us-east4 2017-Q2 Ashburn, Virginia, US
    • us-east4-a
    • us-east4-b
    • us-east4-c
    us-east5 2022-Q2 Columbus, Ohio, USA
    • us-east5-a
    • us-east5-b
    • us-east5-c
    us-south1 2022-Q2 Dallas, Texas, US
    • us-south1-a
    • us-south1-b
    • us-south1-c
    northamerica-northeast1 2018-Q1 Montréal, Canada
    • northamerica-northeast1-a
    • northamerica-northeast1-b
    • northamerica-northeast1-c
    northamerica-northeast2 2021-Q3 Toronto, Canada
    • northamerica-northeast2-a
    • northamerica-northeast2-b
    • northamerica-northeast2-c
    southamerica-east1 2017-Q3 São Paulo, Brazil
    • southamerica-east1-a
    • southamerica-east1-b
    • southamerica-east1-c
    southamerica-west1 2021-Q3 Santiago, Chile
    • southamerica-west1-a
    • southamerica-west1-b
    • southamerica-west1-c
    europe-west1 St. Ghislain, Belgium
    • europe-west1-b
    • europe-west1-c
    • europe-west1-d
    europe-west2 2017-Q2 London, UK
    • europe-west2-a
    • europe-west2-b
    • europe-west2-c
    europe-west3 2017-Q3 Frankfurt, Germany
    • europe-west3-a
    • europe-west3-b
    • europe-west3-c
    europe-west4 2018-Q1 Eemshaven, Netherlands
    • europe-west4-a
    • europe-west4-b
    • europe-west4-c
    europe-west6 2019-Q1 Zurich, Switzerland
    • europe-west6-a
    • europe-west6-b
    • europe-west6-c
    europe-west8 2022-Q2 Milan, Italy
    • europe-west8-a
    • europe-west8-b
    • europe-west8-c
    europe-west9 2022-Q2 Paris, France
    • europe-west9-a
    • europe-west9-b
    • europe-west9-c
    europe-west10 2023-Q3 Berlin, Germany
    • europe-west10-a
    • europe-west10-b
    • europe-west10-c
    europe-west12 2023-Q1 Turin, Italy
    • europe-west12-a
    • europe-west12-b
    • europe-west12-c
    europe-central2 2021-Q2 Warsaw, Poland
    • europe-central2-a
    • europe-central2-b
    • europe-central2-c
    europe-north1 2018-Q2 Hamina, Finland
    • europe-north1-a
    • europe-north1-b
    • europe-north1-c
    europe-southwest1 2022-Q2 Madrid, Spain
    • europe-southwest1-a
    • europe-southwest1-b
    • europe-southwest1-c
    me-west1 2022-Q4 Tel Aviv, Israel
    • me-west1-a
    • me-west1-b
    • me-west1-c
    me-central1 2023-Q2 Doha, Qatar
    • me-central1-a
    • me-central1-b
    • me-central1-c
    me-central2[44] 2023-Q4 Dammam, Saudi Arabia
    • me-central2-a
    • me-central2-b
    • me-central2-c
    asia-south1 2017-Q4 Mumbai, India
    • asia-south1-a
    • asia-south1-b
    • asia-south1-c
    asia-south2 2021-Q2 Delhi, India
    • asia-south2-a
    • asia-south2-b
    • asia-south2-c
    asia-southeast1 2017-Q2 Jurong West, Singapore
    • asia-southeast1-a
    • asia-southeast1-b
    • asia-southeast1-c
    asia-southeast2 2020-Q2 Jakarta, Indonesia
    • asia-southeast2-a
    • asia-southeast2-b
    • asia-southeast2-c
    asia-east1[45] 2013-Q4 Changhua County, Taiwan
    • asia-east1-a
    • asia-east1-b
    • asia-east1-c
    asia-east2 2018-Q3 Hong Kong
    • asia-east2-a
    • asia-east2-b
    • asia-east2-c
    asia-northeast1 2016-Q4 Tokyo, Japan
    • asia-northeast1-a
    • asia-northeast1-b
    • asia-northeast1-c
    asia-northeast2 2019-Q2 Osaka, Japan
    • asia-northeast2-a
    • asia-northeast2-b
    • asia-northeast2-c
    asia-northeast3 2020-Q1 Seoul, Korea
    • asia-northeast3-a
    • asia-northeast3-b
    • asia-northeast3-c
    australia-southeast1 2017-Q3 Sydney, Australia
    • australia-southeast1-a
    • australia-southeast1-b
    • australia-southeast1-c
    australia-southeast2 2021-Q2 Melbourne, Australia
    • australia-southeast2-a
    • australia-southeast2-b
    • australia-southeast2-c
    africa-south1[46] 2024-Q1 Johannesburg, South Africa
    • africa-south1-a
    • africa-south1-b
    • africa-south1-c

    Similarity to services by other cloud service providers

    [edit]

    For those familiar with other notable cloud service providers, a comparison of similar services may be helpful in understanding Google Cloud Platform's offerings.

    Google Cloud Platform Amazon Web Services[47] Microsoft Azure[48] Oracle Cloud[49]
    Google Compute Engine Amazon EC2 Azure Virtual Machines Oracle Cloud Infra OCI
    Google App Engine AWS Elastic Beanstalk Azure App Services Oracle Application Container
    Google Kubernetes Engine Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service Azure Kubernetes Service Oracle Kubernetes Service
    Google Cloud Bigtable Amazon DynamoDB Azure Cosmos DB Oracle NoSQL Database
    Google BigQuery Amazon Redshift Azure Synapse Analytics Oracle Autonomous Data Warehouse
    Google Cloud Functions AWS Lambda Azure Functions Oracle Cloud Fn
    Google Cloud Datastore Amazon DynamoDB Azure Cosmos DB Oracle NoSQL Database
    Google Cloud Storage Amazon S3 Azure Blob Storage Oracle Cloud Storage OCI

    Timeline

    [edit]
    Google Cloud Summit in 2017

    Public Customers

    [edit]

    Customers announced in 2023 include: Kingfisher plc,[95] the Government of Kuwait,[96] Deutsche Börse Group,[97] Unity Technologies,[98] Uber,[99] FanCode,[100] and Daimler.[101]

    See also

    [edit]
  • Google Workspace
  • Heroku
  • IBM Cloud
  • Infrastructure as a service
  • Jelastic
  • Microsoft Azure
  • OpenStack
  • Oracle Cloud
  • Platform as a service
  • Cloud database
  • Google Fiber
  • References

    [edit]
    1. ^ a b "Alphabet Inc. 2023 Annual Form 10-K Report". U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. January 31, 2024. Retrieved January 31, 2024.
  • ^ "Google Cloud Products". Retrieved June 2, 2017.
  • ^ Verma, Abhishek; Pedrosa, Luis; Korupolu, Madhukar; Oppenheimer, David; Tune, Eric; Wilkes, John (April 17, 2015). "Large-scale cluster management at Google with Borg". Proceedings of the Tenth European Conference on Computer Systems. Article 18, sec. 2.1 (p. 1), sec. 6.1 (p. 11). doi:10.1145/2741948.2741964. ISBN 9781450332385.
  • ^ "Google Cloud Free Tier – Google Cloud Platform Free Tier". Google Cloud.
  • ^ "Google Doubles Down on Enterprise by Re-Branding Its Cloud". Fortune. Retrieved September 8, 2018.
  • ^ a b "Making hybrid- and multi-cloud computing a reality". Google Cloud Blog.
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  • ^ Weinberger, Matt. "Google is turning a key technology into a weapon in its cloud war with Amazon and Microsoft". Business Insider. Retrieved April 28, 2022.
  • ^ Gallagher, Sean (May 16, 2013). "Google wants your WordPress blog—and everything else—in its cloud". Ars Technica. Retrieved April 28, 2022.
  • ^ "Google Cloud Platform Gets SSD Persistent Disks And HTTP Load Balancing". TechCrunch. Retrieved April 28, 2022.
  • ^ Condon, Stephanie. "Google rolls out Memorystore for Memcached in beta". ZDNet. Retrieved April 28, 2022.
  • ^ Bednarz, Ann (June 29, 2018). "Google cloud storage gets a boost with managed NAS service". Network World. Retrieved April 28, 2022.
  • ^ Lardinois, Frederic. "Google Cloud launches AlloyDB, a new fully managed PostgreSQL database service". TechCrunch. Retrieved May 12, 2022.
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  • ^ Freund, Karl (May 26, 2016). "Google's TPU Chip Creates More Questions Than Answers". Forbes. Retrieved April 27, 2022.
  • ^ "Google launches new machine learning platform". TechCrunch. Retrieved April 27, 2022.
  • ^ "Developers can now use Google's Cloud Talent Solution to power job searches". VentureBeat. August 16, 2018. Retrieved April 27, 2022.
  • ^ "Google's Dialogflow Enterprise helps businesses create AI-powered chatbots". TechRepublic. April 17, 2018. Retrieved April 27, 2022.
  • ^ "Google Launches Cloud Natural Language API". InfoQ. Retrieved April 27, 2022.
  • ^ Li, Abner (July 20, 2016). "Google Natural Language and Speech APIs enter beta, West Coast Cloud Region opens". 9to5Google. Retrieved April 27, 2022.
  • ^ Vincent, James (March 27, 2018). "Google launches more realistic text-to-speech service powered by DeepMind's AI". The Verge. Retrieved April 27, 2022.
  • ^ "Launch of Google Cloud Vision Revolutionizes How Machines See". Futurism. Retrieved April 27, 2022.
  • ^ "Google's Video Intelligence API can recognise objects in a video". The Indian Express. March 9, 2017. Retrieved April 27, 2022.
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  • [edit]
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Google_Cloud_Platform&oldid=1236708310"

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