2019
DOI: 10.17705/1pais.11303
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Determinants of Cloud Computing Adoption: A Comparative Study

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Cited by 13 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…In addition, Tripathi [12] investigated the determinants of cloud computing acceptance and usage in India. The sample of 458 respondents from adopting and non-adopting firms was used.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, Tripathi [12] investigated the determinants of cloud computing acceptance and usage in India. The sample of 458 respondents from adopting and non-adopting firms was used.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One investigated the differences and similarities in IT decision makers' SaaS acceptance for core and noncore business operations [47]: perceived cost advantage affected SaaS adoption for non-core business operations but not for core business operations, whereas a gap in IT capabilities influenced SaaS adoption for core business operations but not for non-core business operations; interestingly, perceived service quality had a positive effect, and management attitude had a negative effect on SaaS acceptance for both types of business operations. The other considered adopters and non-adopter firms [48]: for both types, perceived ubiquity and perceived benefits were determinant for positive CC adoption, whereas perceived risks was a determinant for negative CC adoption; perceived costs influenced CC adoption for adopter firms but not for nonadopter firms.…”
Section: Technology Acceptance Perspectivementioning
confidence: 99%
“…To the best of our knowledge, prior studies have not considered the influence of dependability on CC acceptance in an organizational context from both the technology acceptance perspective and the holistic perspective on the concept of dependability. Instead, nine studies 'chose' one or two more of dependability attributes or similar concepts, and then incorporated them with the core constructs of their original models for their research goals: availability [27], perceived ubiquity [20,48], reliability [8], security [8,49,53,56], perceived risk [20,27,36,48,52], ease of maintenance [8]. Moreover, most of them focused on the direct relationships between the dependent variable of baseline model (i.e., behavioral intention in TAM) and external variables, not on the relationships between the core constructs of the baseline models (i.e., perceived usefulness, perceived ease of use in TAM) and external variables.…”
Section: Technology Acceptance Perspectivementioning
confidence: 99%
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