Networks Europe Mar-Apr 2016 | Page 6

06 NEWS Networks Europe helps you to understand the art of the possible as the news desk highlights some of the stories currently catching their attention. The cloud, colocation and choice Colocation data centre provider Aegis Data who operate highly resilient and optimised data centre environments for mission critical IT, has announced its membership of the Cloud Industry Forum (CIF). In a sector experiencing rapid growth, CIF champions and advocates the adoption of cloud-based technologies and it works to improve industry standards using education, research and whitepapers. Currently made up of more than 21,000 members CIF also provides certification to a Code of Practice for credible online cloud service provision with the aim of improving transparency for end users and businesses alike. Despite the growth of cloud-based solutions, colocation data centres have continued to remain a viable option. They allow organisations to enjoy an operational expenditure (OPEX) model without relinquishing control of their physical IT estate. Colocation popularity shows little sign of regress according to research from analyst firm 451 Research. They fo und that the amount of data centre space occupied by colocation providers was up 11 per cent in 2014 and is forecast to maintain this level of growth through to 2018 as organisations continue to outsource their IT. Greg McCulloch CEO of Aegis Data comments, “Data centres and cloud technologies are commonly misunderstood as competing services at opposite ends of the spectrum – we don’t see this to be the case at all… the rise of cloud services is affording colocation facilities like us greater opportunities to enhance our proposition…” The network challenge in the data centre With the Internet established as an integral part of daily life and with the mobile Internet and service-oriented cloud computing technologies maturing, Internet traffic has experienced explosive growth. One survey shows that IP traffic from DCs around the world increases at an annual growth rate of 33 per cent on average. The data traffic in DCs is expected to reach 4.8 ZB during 2016 and this poses significant challenges to data centre networks, the infrastructure for service provisioning. Speaking at the 2016 Mobile World Congress, Huawei holds that future networks have to adopt hierarchical DC deployment and DC-centric restructuring so that they can provide a millisecond latency service experience. Based on this, Huawei has unveiled their “Best Experience DC-Centric Network Solution”. It comprises three components: CloudFabric 3.0 for intra-DC connections, DCI for inter-DC connections and CloudVPN for user-to-DC connections. CloudFabric 3.0 provides SDN-based drag-and-drop GUIs, allowing tenant-oriented service provisioning with one click; DCI provides SDN-based E2E IP+optical synergy for automated service provisioning and rapid optimisation and CloudVPN expands the business reach of operators to enterprise networks, helping to increase customer loyalty and business revenue through NaaS. Fixed broadband (FBB) solution provider Huawei has invested heavily in the DC network to provide a DC-centric network solution that will help operators to build next-generation bearer networks. These networks are oriented to cloud services to facilitate operator business transformation in the DC era in a digital transformation market worth trillions of US dollars for operators. www.networkseuropemagazine.com