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Interoperability

Interoperability is the term used to explain the degree to which different systems or components work together without any glitches. According to IEEE and ISO, interoperability can be defined as the ability of two or more systems or applications to exchange information and mutually use the information that has been exchanged. In cloud computing, interoperability can be understood as the capability of diverse systems to understand the applications and interfaces, authentications, configurations, data formats etc., between public, private and hybrid clouds. This capability helps all the systems to cooperate and interoperate to work seamlessly.
For Example:
Google authentication can be stated here as an excellent example for interoperability. Regardless of the device that the user has, all the Google applications share and access authentication data within themselves in a seamless manner. A user can login to Gmail from a particular device and can use all the Google services like YouTube, PlayStore, Google Docs, Google Drive etc. without having to login again and again. It is enough for the user to login to any one of the applications. The data will be shared by all the other apps. This helps the apps to interoperate seamlessly without any glitches.

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