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Hybrid multi-cloud adoption leads to pressure to modernise infrastructure

Hybrid multi-cloud adoption leads to pressure to modernise infrastructure

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Atish Gude, Senior Vice President and Chief Strategy Officer (CSO), NetApp, tells us the move from on-premises environments can unintentionally open the door to increased IT complexity.

2019 was a year of rapid innovation-and disruption-for both the IT industry and the broader business community. With the widespread adoption of hybrid multi-cloud as the de facto architecture for enterprise customers, organisations everywhere are under tremendous pressure to modernise their infrastructure and to deliver tangible business value around data-intensive applications and workloads.

As a result, organisations are shifting from on-premises environments to using public cloud services, building private clouds, and moving from disk to flash in data centres-sometimes concurrently. These transformations open the door to enormous potential, but they also introduce the unintended consequence of increased IT complexity.

Atish Gude, Senior Vice President and Chief Strategy Officer (CSO), NetApp,

We predict that a demand for simplicity and customisability will be the number one factor that drives IT purchasing decisions in 2020. Vendors will need to offer modern, flexible technologies with the choice of how to use and to consume those technologies so that customers can keep pace with their evolving business models.

As IT departments strive to de-emphasise maintenance and hardware, to reduce overheads, and to adopt pay-as-you-go models, simplicity and choice will be crucial.

Achieving this simplicity will serve as the foundation for companies as they navigate the exciting technological trends that we identify in the following sections.

1. As the advent of 5G makes AI-driven Internet of Things (IoT) a reality, Edge Computing environments are primed to become even more disruptive than cloud was.

In preparation for the widespread emergence of 5G, lower-cost sensors and maturing AI applications will be used to build compute-intensive Edge environments. This effort will lay the groundwork for high-bandwidth, low-latency AI-driven IoT environments with the potential for huge innovation and disruption.

The advent of 5G is what AI-driven IoT has been waiting for. It will take a few more years for 5G data technology to spread across the Middle East. However, 2020 will see many players in the technology industry and business community invest in building Edge Computing environments to support the reality of AI-driven IoT.

These environments will make possible new use cases that rely on intelligent, instantaneous, and autonomous decision-making, with low-latency, high-bandwidth capabilities. This evolution will bring us to a world where the Internet will work on our behalf-without even having to ask.

This AI-driven IoT innovation, however, will depend on a massive prioritisation of Edge Computing, further disrupting IT infrastructures and data management priorities. As Edge devices move beyond home devices (such as connected thermostats and speakers) and become more far-reaching (such as connected solar farms), more data centres will be placed at the Edge. Also, platforms such as Artificial Intelligence for IT operations (AIOps) will be necessary to help monitor complex environments across the Edge, the core and the cloud.

2. Hardware-based composable architecture will have less short-term potential against commodity hardware and software-based infrastructure virtualisation.

Continued improvements in commodity hardware performance, software-based virtualisation and microservice software architectures will eliminate much of the performance advantage of proprietary hardware-based composable architectures, relegating them to niche data centre roles soon.

Hardware-based composable architecture is being hyped as the next evolution of hyperconverged infrastructure (HCI). This architecture enables CPUs, networking cards, workload accelerators, and storage resources to be distributed across a rack-scale architecture and to be connected with low-latency PCIe-based switching. And although composable architecture does have potential, standardisation has been slow, and adoption has been even slower.

Meanwhile, software-based virtualisation of storage, combined with software-based (but hardware-accelerated) compute and networking virtualisation solutions, offers much of the flexibility of hardware-based composable architectures today with lower cost and consistently increasing performance.

In 2020, attempts to build a true hardware-based rack-scale computing model will no doubt continue, and the space will continue to evolve quickly. However, most organisations that must transform within 2020 will be best served by a combination of modern HCI architectures (including disaggregated HCI) and software-based virtualisation and containersation.  

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