[1] It offers Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) from Fujitsu's data centres to provide computing resources that can be employed on-demand and suited to customers needs.
[5] On October 16, 2018, the company stated that it will hire 10,000 employees and train them to use Microsoft Azure in order to "address what we see as an industry-wide shortage in cloud related skills, so that we can help the clients to address their execution gap in the provision of services which support operational efficiency, digital co-creation and multi-cloud management.”[6] Fujitsu launched its global cloud strategy in April 2010.
IaaS Trusted Public S5 employs templates to allow customers to quickly deploy virtual systems.
A template consists of a firewall, network segment definitions and virtual servers with OS/middleware installed and set up.
A virtual system includes a firewall to control access between the network segments and from and to the Internet and intranet.
Virtual servers are chosen from a list of pre-defined images, which have only an operating system installed or also additional software.
[16] Fujitsu has claimed that licensing is the only issue that prevents delivery of Microsoft Office as a cloud service to web based devices, in a manner similar to Google Docs.
[20] Servers are physically located in Fujitsu's Tier III data centers[9] in Japan, Australia, Singapore, UK, US and Germany.