La computación en la nube se ha vuelto omnipresente. Pero si eres un empresario en Tijuana que evalúa adoptar alguna solución cloud, puede que te preguntes: ¿qué son exactamente los servicios en la nube y qué beneficios ofrecen?
Exploraremos en este artículo el concepto básico detrás de la nube, los tipos de servicios disponibles y los principales beneficios que aportan a las organizaciones locales de Baja California.
La computación en la nube, mejor conocida como “cloud computing”, se refiere al suministro de recursos informáticos a demanda vía internet.
En lugar de invertir y administrar infraestructura de TI propia, las empresas acceden a estos recursos según sus necesidades en el momento desde proveedores especializados.
Entre los recursos provistos bajo demanda se incluyen potencia de cómputo, almacenamiento de datos, análisis de información, redes e inteligencia artificial entre muchos otros.
Existen 3 modelos para la entrega de servicios de computación en la nube:
Infraestructura como servicio (IaaS) permite alquilar infraestructura de TI: servidores, storage, redes y sistemas operativos base.
Plataforma (PaaS) habilita desarrollar, implementar y administrar aplicaciones cloud utilizando lenguajes y herramientas provistas por el proveedor sin administrar el hardware subyacente.
Software (SaaS) entrega aplicaciones terminadas operando 100% en la nube pública a las cuales la empresa accede vía web o aplicaciones móviles.
Migrar sistemas y cargas de trabajo empresariales a la nube trae ventajas clave para organizaciones de toda industria en Baja California como:
Se elimina la necesidad de grandes inversiones iniciales en infraestructura propia al pagar solo por los recursos consumidos.
Se provisionan y liberan recursos fácilmente para satisfacer demandas cambiantes, optimizando gasto.
Permite acceder a aplicaciones y archivos desde cualquier lugar con cualquier dispositivo con conexión a internet.
El proveedor cloud se encarga de mantenimiento y tareas operativas, permitiendo concentrarse en innovar.
La información permanece respaldada externalmente en múltiples servidores, recuperándose rápidamente ante cualquier interrupción mayor.
Como puedes ver, migrar tus sistemas a la nube, ya sea IaaS, PaaS o SaaS puede aportar múltiples beneficios de agilidad, flexibilidad operativa y optimización de costos para impulsar la competitividad de tu negocio en Tijuana y el resto de Baja California.
Tijuana | |
---|---|
Flag Coat of arms | |
Nickname: Gateway to Mexico | |
Motto: Aquí empieza la patria ("The fatherland begins here") | |
Tijuana Location of Tijuana within Baja California Show map of Baja CaliforniaTijuana Tijuana (Mexico) Show map of MexicoTijuana Tijuana (North America) Show map of North America | |
Coordinates: 32°31′30″N 117°02′0″W / 32.52500°N 117.03333°W / 32.52500; -117.03333 | |
Country | Mexico |
State | Baja California |
Municipality | Tijuana |
Founded | 11 July 1889 |
Government | |
• Type | Ayuntamiento |
• Mayor | Montserrat Caballero Ramírez ( MORENA) |
Area | |
• City | 637 km2 (246 sq mi) |
• Metro | 1,392.5 km2 (537.9 sq mi) |
Elevation | 20 m (65 ft) |
Population (2020) | |
• City | 1,922,523[1] |
• Rank | 19th in North America 2nd in Mexico |
• Density | 2,832.5/km2 (7,336/sq mi) |
• Urban | 2,002,000 (estimated)[2] |
• Metro | 2,157,853[1] |
Demonym(s) | Tijuanan (in Spanish) Tijuanense[3] |
Time zone | UTC−8 (PST) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC−7 (PDT) |
Postal codes | 22000–22699 |
Area code | + 52 664/663 |
Website | www.tijuana.gob.mx |
Despite its popularity as a tourist destination, Tijuana is a hotbed of crime, especially violent crime, due to the extensive presence of organized crime and Mexican cartels. It regularly ranks among the most violent cities by homicide rate. According to Statista in August 2023, Tijuana presently has the second highest homicide rate in the world.[15] The U.S. State Department maintains a travel advisory warning as of September 2023 relating to the city's "non-tourist areas."[16] Incidents involving the murder or kidnapping of foreigners since the 2000s have also sparked travel fears and affected Tijuana's status among international tourists.[17][18] Tijuana traces its modern history to the arrival of Spanish colonists in the 16th century who were mapping the coast of the Californias. Following the division of the Californias after the American Conquest of California, Tijuana found itself located on an international border, giving rise to a new economic and political structure. The city was incorporated on 11 July 1889 as urban development began. The city has served as a major tourist destination since the 1880s. Today, Tijuana is a dominant manufacturing center for North America, hosting facilities of many multinational conglomerate companies. In the early 21st century, Tijuana has emerged as the medical device manufacturing capital of North America and is increasingly recognized as an important cultural Mecca for the border region of The Californias.[14] The city is the most visited border city in the world, sharing a border of about 24 km (15 mi) with its sister city San Diego. More than fifty million people cross the border between these two cities every year. Tijuana is the 47th largest city in the Americas and is the westernmost city in Mexico. According to the 2015 census, the Tijuana metropolitan area was the fifth-largest in Mexico, with a population of 1,840,710,[8] but rankings vary, the city (locality) itself was 6th largest and the municipality (administrative) third largest nationally. The international metropolitan region was estimated at 5,158,459 in 2016,[9] making it the third-largest metropolitan area in The Californias, 19th-largest metropolitan area in the Americas,[10] and the largest bi-national conurbation that is shared between US and Mexico. Tijuana is the second most populous city in Mexico and center of the 6th-largest metro area in Mexico,[11] The city is one of the fastest-growing metro areas in the country and rated as a "High Sufficiency" global city by the Globalization and World Cities Research Network.[12][11] As of September 2019[update], the city of Tijuana had a population of 1,810,645, with its metropolitan area containing a population of 2,157,853 as of 2020, an estimated 2,002,000 within the urban area.[13][2] Tijuana[a] is the largest city in the state of Baja California located on the northwestern Pacific Coast of Mexico. Tijuana is the municipal seat of the Tijuana Municipality and the hub of the Tijuana metropolitan area. It has a close proximity to the Mexico–United States border, which is part of the San Diego-Tijuana metro area.
The land was originally inhabited by the Kumeyaay, a tribe of Yuman-speaking hunter-gatherers. Europeans arrived in 1542, when colonist Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo toured the coastline of the area, which Sebastián Vizcaíno mapped in 1602. In 1769, Juan Crespí documented more details about the area that was later called the Valley of Tijuana. Junípero Serra founded the first mission of Alta California in nearby San Diego. Further settlement took place near the end of the mission era when José María de Echeandía, governor of the Baja California and Alta California, awarded a large land grant to Santiago Argüello in 1829. This large cattle ranch, Rancho Tía Juana, covered 100 km2 (40 sq mi). Although "Tia Juana" means "Aunt Jane" in Spanish, the name was actually an adaptation of the word 'Tihuan' or 'Tijuán' in the Kumeyaay language, the name of a nearby Kumeyaay settlement and whose meaning is disputed. In 1848, as a result of the Mexican–American War with the United States, Mexico lost Alta California. While the majority of the 1,000 Hispanic families living in Alta California stayed on the American side, some moved south to Tijuana to remain inside Mexico, which was now in Baja California as the division between the Californias moved north in between San Diego and Tijuana. Because of this Tijuana gained a different purpose on the international border. The area had been populated by ranchers, but Tijuana developed a new social economic structure which were farming and livestock grazing, plus as a transit area for prospectors. Urban settlement began in 1889, when descendants of Santiago Argüello and Augustín Olvera entered an agreement to begin developing the city of Tijuana. The date of the agreement, 11 July 1889, is recognized as the founding of the city. Tijuana saw its future in tourism from the beginning. From the late 19th century to the first few decades of the 20th century, the city attracted large numbers of Californians coming for trade and entertainment. The California land boom of the 1880s led to the first big wave of tourists, who were called "excursionists" and came looking for echoes of the famous novel Ramona by Helen Hunt Jackson. In 1911, during the Mexican Revolution, revolutionaries claiming loyalty to Ricardo Flores Magón took over the city for shortly over a month. Federal troops then arrived. Assisted by the "defensores de Tijuana", they routed the revolutionaries, who fled north and were promptly arrested by the United States Army. The Panama-California Exposition of 1915 brought many visitors to the nearby California city of San Diego. Tijuana attracted these tourists with a Feria Típica Mexicana – Typical Mexican Fair. This included curio shops, regional food, thermal baths, horse racing and boxing. The first professional race track opened in January 1916, just south of the border gate. It was almost immediately destroyed by the great "Hatfield rainmaker" flood of 1916. Rebuilt in the general area, it ran horse races until the new Agua Caliente track opened in 1929, several miles south and across the river on higher ground. Legal drinking and gambling attracted U.S nationals in the 1920s during Prohibition. The Avenida Revolución area became the city's tourist center, with casinos and the Hotel Caesar's, birthplace of the Caesar salad. In 1925, the city by presidential decree changed its name to ciudad Zaragoza, but its name reverted to Tijuana in 1929. In 1928, the Agua Caliente Touristic Complex was opened, including hotel, spa, dog-track, private airport, golf course and gambling casino. A year later, the new Agua Caliente Racetrack joined the complex. During the eight years it operated, the Agua Caliente hotel, casino and spa achieved a near mythical status, with Hollywood stars and gangsters flying in and playing. Rita Hayworth was discovered there. Musical nightclub productions were broadcast over the radio. A singer known as "la Faraona" got shot in a love-triangle and gave birth to the myth of a beautiful lady ghost. Remnants of the Agua Caliente casino can be seen in the outdoor swimming pool and the "minarete" (actually a former incinerator chimney) nearby the southern end of Avenida Sanchez Taboada, on the grounds of what is now the Lázaro Cárdenas educational complex. In 1935, President Cárdenas decreed an end to gambling and casinos in Baja California, and the Agua Caliente complex faltered, then closed. In 1939, it was reopened as a junior high school (now, Preparatoria Lázaro Cárdenas). The buildings themselves were torn down in the 1970s and replaced by modern scholastic architecture. With increased tourism and a large number of Mexican citizens relocating to Tijuana, the city's population grew from 21,971 to 65,364 between 1940 and 1950. With the decline of nightlife and tourism in the 1950s, the city restructured its tourist industry, by promoting a more family-oriented scene. Tijuana developed a greater variety of attractions and activities to offer its visitors. In 1965, the Mexican federal government launched the Border Industrialization Program to attract foreign investment. Tijuana and other border cities became attractive for foreign companies to open maquiladoras (factories), and the Tijuana economy started to diversify. Manufacturing jobs attracted workers from other parts of Mexico and the city's population grew from less than half a million in 1980 to almost 1 million in 1985. In 1972, work began on the first concrete channeling of the Tijuana River; previously the river would flood across a wide plain east and southeast of downtown, inundating an area of cardboard and metal shacks called Cartolandia (“Paperland”). The project removed the shacks and added 1.8 million sq. m. of usable land, on which the Zona Río was built. With the 1981 opening of the Plaza Río Tijuana mall and the 1982 Tijuana Cultural Center (CECUT), Zona Río became the new commercial center of a modern Tijuana, and with its new boulevards with monument-filled glorietas (roundabouts), reminiscent of the grand Paseo de la Reforma in Mexico City, the city created the new image and allure of a modern, large city, rather than just a border town focused on tourism and vice. In 1994, PRI presidential candidate Luis Donaldo Colosio was assassinated in Tijuana while making an appearance in the plaza of Lomas Taurinas, a neighborhood nestled in a valley near Centro. The shooter was caught and imprisoned, but doubts remain about who the mastermind might have been. After 9/11, tighter US border controls resulted in hours-long waits to return to the US. The number of US visitors dropped sharply due to this factor, as well as subsequent drug violence. Around 2008, thousands of Tijuana's elite bought houses in and moved to Bonita and Eastlake in Chula Vista, California, to escape violence, kidnapping and other crimes taking place during that period. An article in The Los Angeles Times reported that the emigration to San Diego County has transformed the demographic and cultural character of some cities to a degree. In recent years, Tijuana has become an important city of commerce and migration for Mexico and US. In spite of the violence and border crossing issues, the city has received a large number of tourists from US, China, Japan and the south of Mexico. Thanks to the realization of cultural and business festivals, the city has improved its image before the world, standing out as a competitive city for investment. Currently, the commercial and business sector is committed to the boom in the gastronomic industry, craft beer, entertainment, and real estate, as well as medical tourism, to attract visitors and investors.[citation needed]
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Los servicios en la nube Tijuana se refieren a las empresas o proveedores en Tijuana que ofrecen servicios de almacenamiento y gestión de datos a través de internet, eliminando la necesidad de hardware físico local.
Los beneficios incluyen el acceso remoto a los datos, reducción de costos al eliminar la necesidad de infraestructura física, respaldo y recuperación de datos más eficientes, así como escalabilidad y flexibilidad para adaptarse a las necesidades cambiantes del negocio.
La mayoría de los proveedores de servicios en la nube implementan medidas rigurosas para proteger los datos. Esto puede incluir cifrado avanzado, firewalls, autenticación multifactor y políticas estrictas con respecto al acceso y uso del servicio.
Al elegir un proveedor, considera factores como el nivel de seguridad ofrecido, si tienen buena reputación, si proporcionan soporte adecuado al cliente y si sus precios se ajustan a tu presupuesto. También es importante revisar sus términos y condiciones para comprender qué responsabilidades asumen sobre tus datos.