November 1, 2020

2173 words 11 mins read

Infrastructure is everywhere and so is your data

Infrastructure is everywhere and so is your data

This article originally appeared in Issue 10 of IT Pro 20/20, available here. To sign up to receive each new issue in your inbox, click here. If there’s one thing that COVID-19 has taught the business world, it’s the importance of agility. The pandemic has added to the existing pressures of new competition, new markets and an always open global economy – all of which require business leaders to us

e technology as a tool to drive business value by increasing flexibility, speed and agility. “It’s never been more important for IT and business leaders to explore new and diverse sourcing models in order to reduce legacy equipment, consolidate suppliers, globalise catalogues and eliminate unnecessary or outdated applications,” explains Adam Burden, Accenture’s technology lead for North America. “Ultimately, the need for a more agile infrastructure is now greater than ever.” Tyrran Ferguson, head of artificial intelligence (AI) at multinational IT services provider SCC argues that “when you consider the difference between large corporates versus startups, you see the benefits that agility can bring. Generally, startups are more flexible and they tend to cater much more specifically to customer requirements, and larger corporations are trying to mimic this. The need for agility is only amplified by changing industry and regulations. Things like public-cloud and GDPR stipulations have forced a lot of strategies to change.” Against this backdrop, infrastructure and operations (I&O) leaders face a huge amount of pressure. “These are uncertain times,” says Milind Govekar, chief of research within analyst firm Gartner’s I&O research team. “Businesses want the ability to be able to turn on a dime and adapt to change quickly. This requires an agile infrastructure. CEOs realise that actually cultural resistance to change is lower than it has been for a long time, and openness to digital transformation is high. As a result, they are putting pressure on their I&O teams who – after facilitating working from home on a mass scale – are suddenly in the limelight.” A framework for success  According to Gartner, these I&O teams need to create an IT infrastructure that is always on, always available and everywhere. By embracing emerging trends in edge computing, AI, machine learning (ML) and the ever-changing cloud marketplace, they will enable more global reach, solve business issues and ensure the flexibility to enter new markets quickly, anywhere and anytime. SEE MORE How to protect your endpoints SEE MORE IT Pro 20/20: Building a future-proof business SEE MORE How good is your backup, really? “As the use of AI and ML becomes more prescriptive, I&O leaders need to understand the downstream impact that these technologies will have on future infrastructure,” explains Jesse McHargue, technology evangelist at Nintex. “Now, given the current state of remote work, the changing infrastructure is closely mirroring edge computing models. Edge computing, and other evolving infrastructures, are putting more power in the hands of the users, instead of being locked away in a central location. Edge computing will play a major role in how organisations look at the future of their infrastructures.” This is what Govekar calls the move to ‘data connect', rather than ‘data collect’ – the ability to process data in situ at the edge and only moving this data to lakes of data centres if absolutely necessary. Keeping it close  “It has become abundantly clear that latency-sensitive applications require proximity to the things that use them,” explains Russell Poole, managing director at global digital infrastructure company Equinix. “But they don’t just need to be close to users – they also need to be near supporting systems, applications, and private and public clouds to ensure latency doesn’t impact the customer experience.” A more agile infrastructure built around centres of data will ultimately enable data to be managed far more effectively. “It will enable organisations to pivot quickly, get data into the right ecosystems and prevent operational processes from being halted by the ‘plumbing’ we see today,” says Ferguson. “It would mean that all platforms and applications are handled in a way where their data has a journey-plan and the business knows how to store it, how to cleanse it, how to apply meta tags to it and then determine what they want to do with it.” It’s a compelling proposition – and one that’s already gathering pace. Indeed, Gartner predicts that, in as a little as two years’ time, 60% of enterprise IT infrastructures will focus on centres of data, rather than traditional data centres. “While data centres are not going away anytime soon, they are rapidly evolving and need to be simplified,” says Konstantinos Roungeris, a member of the cloud and compute team at multinational technology firm Cisco. “There are many organisations that still have hundreds of applications stored in their own data centres or hosted in co-location sites – applications that are critical to their business and reflect years of investments. Furthermore, there are still many examples of firms running bespoke hardware and software … that can’t be replicated in the cloud. But the role of the data centre is changing. The new data centre is effectively the whole multi-cloud landscape, so a new approach is needed.” McHargue agrees. “Traditional data centres will be reimagined,” he says. “The idea of a traditional data centre in a closet or back room will disappear over time as we move forward with cloud computing and edge computing.” Inhibitors to success  Unfortunately, Gartner research has also found that 75% of I&O leaders are not prepared with the skills, behaviours or cultural presence needed for effective change to happen. “More than investing in new tooling, this is about facilitating a cultural change that enables I&O leaders to simplify their everyday complexity and spend more time on strategies focused on that exact evolution,” says Roungeris. “A shift in both mindset and culture are absolutely fundamental to facilitating a more agile infrastructure,” adds Gartner’s Govekar. “However, while over 70% of organisations have a project in place to lean out their infrastructure, they have insufficient skills and resources to make it happen.” And these aren’t the only barriers to success.  “The biggest issue of creating ‘centres of data’ is the underlying architecture and technology ‘ballet’ needed to ensure there is a consistent version of the truth – no matter the data lake, the system or data stream being interrogated,” says Burden. Indeed, one of the primary pitfalls of centres of data is duplicate efforts. Many organisations are paying for resources and tools across multiple centres – HR might be building processes and storing data one place, while legal and finance are each doing the same elsewhere. “Before you know it, you may be paying for multiple tools across multiple centres, and that’s not going to be good in the long run for organisations,” says McHargue. “Organisations need to decide if it’s more cost effective to have them separated out, managed on five smaller data centres or run on a single data centre.” Security is also a concern. “In many large multinational organisations, security and regulatory requirements can play a role in them maintaining compute infrastructure on-premises,” says Roungeris. These are sophisticated challenges, but they absolutely need to be met in a world hungry for real-time decision making. In fact, those that fail to adapt will have a hefty price to pay: According to recent research by Accenture, companies that only make defensive technology investments are more likely to face disruption, growth stagnation and financial constraints. In contrast, those that implement an agile approach through technologies such as automation, DevOps and continuous delivery are outperforming their peers in revenue growth and operating margin – and stand to generate double the revenue growth of those that lag behind. Preparing for change With this in mind, I&O leaders that have not already made the first steps towards creating an agile infrastructure need to do so now. “This is a journey – it won’t happen overnight,” says Govekar, who believes there are a number of things that can be done to make the transition easier. “First, I&O leaders need to work out where they are on the journey,” he explains. “While everyone has a technology strategy, not everyone has a talent strategy, so that’s something to think about. Next, they need to get familiar with platform technology and build an understanding of KPIs and metrics in terms of how they can work with stakeholders to drive business outcomes. Ultimately, it’s about people and processes – and only then can you start thinking about technology.” Roungeris adds that, when it comes to the technology elements, “a very relevant opportunity right now is importing or building in-house skills around public cloud, everything as code, microservices and cloud native frameworks (service mesh for example)”. “Contributing or driving re-usable shared practices such as cloud architects and cloud centres of excellence are also key areas, as well as promoting strategies for cross-domain collaboration as the new status quo,” he says Ultimately, McHargue advises I&O leaders to look at the tech trends they are witnessing across their own industry and use those to help guide their decision. “I cannot stress enough how important it is for I&O leaders to have these conversations now,” he says. “At some point we’re going to hit an inflection point and need to make a change. Being prepared will ensure that when that change comes, organisations are prepared – and can reap the rewards of an agile approach, instead of being displaced by it.”

Date: 2020-12-01

URL: http://feeds.itpro.co.uk/~r/ITPro/Today/~3/01tf1s515Dw/infrastructure-is-everywhere-and-so-is-your-data

itpro.co.uk

AWS to launch Zurich data centres in 2022 (2020-11-02) AWShas announced it will be launching a new Europe region in Zurich slated for opening in the latter half of 2022 Zurich will be the firms eighth region in Europe alongside thoseDublin Frankfurt London Paris Stockholm Milan and Spain SEE MORE UKs WANdisco partners with AWS to drive cloud migration projects SEE MORE Irish AWS data centres to be powered by 100% renewable energy by 2025 SEE MORE The .. AWS to launch Zurich data centres in 2022
Ransomware remains the top cyber security risk for SMBs (2020-11-17) Ransomware still poses the biggest malware threat to small and medium-sized businesses SMBs cloud cyber security providerDattohas found The findings are part of Dattos fifth annual Global State of the Channel Ransomware Report which surveyed more than 1000 MSPs on trends driving ransomware breaches as well as the impactCOVID-19has had on SMB security SEE MORE UK ransomware attacks surged 80% in la..
Microsoft Surface Laptop 3 15in review gallery (2020-12-02) The new embiggened version of Microsofts ultraportable is slickly designed but falls behind the 135in model in multiple metrics
OnePlus 7T Pro review gallery (2020-11-27) The latest from OnePlus doesnt dazzle but doesnt disappoint
Microsoft Defender for Identity can now detect Zerologon exploits (2020-12-01) Microsoft has updated its Microsoft Defender for Identity programme to detect Zerologon exploits enabling SecOps teams to detect attacks using this vulnerability The Zerologon flaw is authentication bypass flaw in the Netlogon Remote Protocol MS-NRPC that allows an attack against Microsoft Active Directory domain controllers making it possible for a hacker to impersonate any computer including the..
Intel’s Rocket Lake-S desktop CPUs set to arrive in 2021 (2020-10-30) Intel has revealedits 11th-gen CPU lineup complete with a set of S-series desktop processors aimed at high-performance desktop machines and users craving power for the most demanding tasks Dubbed Rocket Lake-S the 11th-gen Intel Core processor will introduce a new architecture known as Cypress Cove which is designed to transform hardware and software efficiency and boost performance These will be .. Intel’s Rocket Lake-S desktop CPUs set to arrive in 2021
Using technology to keep intruders out and data safe (2020-11-06) Noble Group CISO Shane Read has spent the past five years helping his company recover from a cyber security incident that had an enormous impact on the business A rogue insider wiped billions off the companys value in 2015 through unauthorised exfiltration of data from the company The share price of what was once a 5000-strong company collapsed and the companys value dropped from $12 billion to ar..
Raspberry Pi: Top projects to try yourself (2019-12-06) The best projects to try with the Raspberry Pi and Raspberry Pi Zero
Dystopian tech has failed to live up to the hype (2020-11-17) The Cambridge Analytica scandal was arguably the most significant watershed moment for the tech industry in recent times Five years on from the initial disclosures we can see the ways in which data protection and privacy have become major issues Its true not just for businesses but for users too whove often been apathetic to their data footprint The now-defunct companys micro-targeting technology ..
Police CyberAlarm monitoring tool rolls out across England and Wales (2020-11-23) Businesses across England and Wales will be able to benefit from a free police-led monitoring tool and use it to improve their security and cyber resilience Named Police CyberAlarm the tool monitors a business internet traffic by collecting metadata and uses it to detect and provide regular reports of suspected malicious activity Initially introduced in June as a pilot in four regions across Engla..