IoT, Big data, Hybrid Cloud to be India’s mega trends for 2015: NetApp
VARINDIA- INDIA'S FRONTLINE IT MAGAZINE
By Anil Valluri,
President, NetApp India & SAARC
If
2014 was a year of big change in technology and new visions for India
by the government – the digital India, Make in India and the smart
cities campaign, 2015 will solidify these changes and start a
transformation. Technology will play an important role, with massive
deployments in network, data, storage and analytics. Some top technology
trends we envisage in India are –
# Mushrooming of Internet of Things and Big Data Analytics
The
year ahead will see quantum increases in data generation, led by the
IOT phenomenon. Data will become the new gold. A leading industry
analyst firm’s Digital Universe analysis of the growth of data projects
that intelligent connected devices will increase the amount of “useful
data” that can be analyzed and used to make decisions from 22% in 2013
to 35% in 2020. This “useful data” needs to be in digital storage in
order to enable the analysis and use of this data. This will compel
enterprises and government alike to think harder about network
efficiency, storage and analytics. If India is to achieve the goals we
have set for ourselves in 2014, a calibrated approach is an imperative,
born of long term technology roadmaps. Analytics deployments will be
spurred in the increasingly complex marketing and consumer engagement
environment that have been created in the digital era.
# Enterprise platforms will move to multi-vendor hybrid cloud architectures
Organizations
contemplating both green field and brown field cloud deployments will
tend towards a multi-vendor hybrid cloud environment, that will provide
the benefits of both the worlds – public and private cloud. Avoidance
of lock-in, leverage in negotiations, or simply a desire for choice will
make customers reluctant to work with one cloud vendor, and
multiple-vendor hybrid clouds will attain prominence. This growth will
further be boosted as big data evolves and drives the need for
sophisticated storage infrastructure.
# Software Defined Storage will form the foundation for hybrid cloud
Software
Defined Storage (SDS) is foundational platform which address range of
use cases managing data placement according to cost, compliance,
availability, and performance requirements. SDS has the ability to be
deployed on different hardware platforms and will extend to cloud
architectures as well. SDS will enable data accessibility across cloud
platforms consistently, thus simplifying data management.
In
addition, India will see fallout impact of the following global trends
in 2015 (as predicted by Jay Kidd, SVP and CTO, NetApp)
# Flash arrays will take baby steps
Till
date, enterprises have used disks to store their critical data. These
SATA disks come with a lot of challenges including space usage, time
taken to input and overhead costs to maintain the requisite environment.
While this is definitely not going to change and at least 80% of
enterprise data will continue to reside on disks, Flash will start
taking baby steps as organizations become aware of its advantages and
ease of use. However, the growth of this transformative technology will
be hindered by costs - the least expensive SSDs will likely be 10 times
more expensive than the least expensive SATA disks.
# Hyper-Converged Infrastructure is the New Compute Server
Hyper-converged
Infrastructure (HCI) products are becoming the new compute server with
Direct-Attached Storage (DAS). Traditional data center compute consists
of blades or boxes in racks that have dedicated CPUs, memory, I/O and
network connections, and run dozens of VMs. HCI such as VMware’s EVO
allows local DAS to be shared across a few servers, making the unit of
compute more resilient, while broadly shared data is accessed over the
LAN or SAN. Starting in 2015, the emergence of solid state storage,
broader adoption of remote direct memory access (RDMA) network
protocols, and new interconnects will drive a compute model where the
cores, memory, and IOPs storage will be integrated in a low-latency
fabric that will make them behave as a single rack-scale system.
# Dockers replace hypervisors as the container of choice for scale-out applications
Companies
are increasingly looking for scale-out applications. To accommodate
this need, Dockers are more resource efficient and reduce the storage
space required as compared to hypervisors. We will see the emergence of a
robust ecosystem for data management through Dockers and other
surrounding services in 2015.
With
the IoT devices expected to grow to 4.9 billion in 2015, up 30 per cent
from 2014 and reach 25 billion by 2020 as per a leading analyst firm,
unstructured data is being created by every device thinkable – from
smartphones, laptops, social to cloud applications. Organizations need
to become technologically sharp to deal with the changing dynamics in
the big data space. They should adopt improved storage solutions to
address their needs and the above predictions hold good for them.
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