From InterOp: Greater Demands on Networks
There is some great reporting coming out of InterOp IT Expo in Las Vegas this week.
One observation I think is right on the mark is that the demands on networking are going through the roof as consumers and businesses increasingly take to the lure of new and improved technologies.
Capacity needs are climbing – not just from growing use of cloud tools and services, such as systems, transaction, cloud performance and other monitoring, but also from the ever-growing ranks of iPod users, virtual desktop users and the popularity of favorites like Salesforce.com SaaS.
PCMag’s blog writes that the show looks like it’s more crowded than it has been over the last few years (Good news for the convention industry and Las Vegas!), with a lot of presence from companies like F5, Riverbed and Bluecoat talking about their traditional networking solutions. Security, network traffic, and WAN acceleration were big topics.
But also among the buzz was cloud talk. HP had one of the biggest booths (and a second booth, actually, because of its recent acquisition of 3Com), and HP’s CTO for networking, Paul Congdon, talked about the role of the cloud in merging the two firms. He said HP’s focus is flexibility. In other words – using the same components to allow different companies to control different parts of the network. Converged infrastructures will clearly make it easier for large firms to build their own cloud platforms.
Software vendors were plentiful, too, and the topic du jour was apparently network management and virtualization. Both Citirix and VMware hawked their desktop virtualization tools – Xen Desktop and VMware View, respectively.
I predict we’ll see continued dependence on networks as the cloud industry grows – just as commerce has grown dependent on oil to run smoothly and relatively cheaply (and I hate to make this comparison as an oil slick wreaks disaster in the Gulf of Mexico). That’s why it’s so important to implement a system that continually monitors servers and networks. You don’t want to lose business to competitors or make your employees miserable with unnecessary computing problems!
