Explanation:
Today's Software as a Service (SaaS) solutions rely on the internet, and in order to access it, they require a web browser.
Explanation:
In the 1990s, as the Internet grew, a new type of centralized computing known as application service providers emerged (ASP). Through a centralized administration system, these providers offered organizations the chance to host and manage specialized applications that would cut expenses.
Explanation:
Software as a Service, often known as vertical SaaS, is a subset of SaaS that is tailored to a particular market or sector. Vertical SaaS often includes features and capabilities that are unique to that market or industry and is created to address the needs of that market or industry.
Explanation:
Business application hosting has been centralized since the 1960s.
Explanation:
Direct and indirect distribution are the two basic types of SaaS. A software firm offers its products directly to customers through, for instance, its website in a direct SaaS distribution strategy. A software manufacturer distributes its products through independent resellers, who subsequently resell them to clients, according to an indirect SaaS distribution model.
Explanation:
Cloud databases of the DbaaS (Database as a Service) form have become a subset of SaaS. For a while, Microsoft referred to SaaS as "software plus services."