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Wednesday, 25 January 2017 00:00 - - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}
By Chris Chelliah
It’s likely that your approach to cloud infrastructure adoption was cautious at first. You may have limited your focus to rapid provisioning, or reducing equipment and operational costs.
But the benefits of the cloud have been impossible to resist. It continues to evolve, gaining credibility across every industry. Today, we expect all enterprise systems to have the transformative aspects of the cloud.
You’ll see that the infrastructure-as¬a-service (laaS) landscape in 2017 has even more to offer.
Cloud has long promised the migration of all enterprise production workloads. But that migration has yet to happen.
The chief barrier to cloud migration remains a lack of commitment and recourse to support production service-level agreements. On one hand, cloud providers are limiting their accountability as they lack the talent to support custom portfolios. On the other, they’re failing to provide sufficient control into the public data centre to self-manage service-level agreements.
The laaS provider best equipped to take more responsibility and deliver the control tenants demand will be the one to drive cloud migration in 2017.
Article: ClubCorp CIO sees cloud as hole in one for golf – http://www.informationweek.com/cloud/clubcorp-cio-sees-cloud-as-hole-in-one-for-golf-/d/d-id/1326976
Just a few years ago, this statement would have seemed outrageous. But now, it seems all but inevitable.
As organisations focus their IT spending on cloud computing, they’ll begin to migrate their workloads from corporate-owned data centres to purpose-built facilities, managed and run by enterprise cloud providers. Mark Hurd predicts that we’ll see corporate-owned data centre numbers fall 80 percent by 2025, and that the same percentage of IT spending will be devoted to cloud services.
While corporate data centre numbers may not fall straight away, we do expect an immediate reduction in direct investment for compute capacity, storage, and networking services.
Blog: Mark Hurd predicts the future of IT: Round 2 – https://blogs.oracle.com/TheOracleBlog/mark-hurd-predicts-the-future-of-it:-round-2
IT processing
This year’s threat landscape will be highly changeable. External threats — coupled with the need for better governance and privacy mandates —will make security a key priority for all lines of business.
In years past, security was a major barrier to cloud investment. Data sovereignty, data privacy, and control issues deterred many organisations from pursuing cloud adoption. But in future, those very same concerns will be the things that draw new organisations to the cloud.
Established cloud vendors with solid security track records have the expertise and resources to deploy layers of defence that many companies simply cannot duplicate in-house.
Survey: Security Inside Out – https://go.oracle.com/LP=37222?elqCampaignId=41933&src1=SO:TW&src2=Tw-EMEA-Org
empowers small business innovation
Cloud has become a catalyst for small business growth, allowing them to innovate freely, carve out new markets, and disrupt the status quo.
The digital economy demands that companies of all sizes compete based on technology-enabled value. While some seek to evolve existing business practices, others are striving to launch new services that exploit extensive, low-cost computational power. Traditionally, access to such high-performance resource has been too expensive for smaller businesses. But what once cost 100 million USD up front is now available for 10 USD per hour.
The cloud is allowing small businesses to innovate, experiment, and sustain ongoing profitability.
Blog: How Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) can help you in your ‘shark tank’ moment – https://blogs.oracle.com/smb/how-infrastructure-as-a-service-can-help-in-your-shark-tank-moment
Over 90% of companies have multiple systems management tools, but just 6% trust their incomplete data. Consequently, IT operations professionals struggle to create effective management approaches.
The pace of business is increasing. As more organisations adopt DevOps practices and focus on digital experience, they’ll need to eliminate management data silos and embrace machine learning just to keep up.
Some have already embraced systems management in the cloud, unifying management data across multiple clouds and on premises. Others are benefiting from data science applied to the operational management problem. Only Oracle Management Cloud provides an intelligent, unified, cloud-based approach that applies machine learning to the complete operational data set. And while many cloud tools are built exclusively for cloud systems, ours does both.
We expect that by 2020, 60% will have moved their most critical systems management use cases to the cloud.
Video: IDEA cellular provides a deep dive on transforming IT with machine learning – http://medianetwork.oracle.com/video/player/5258711928001
(The writer is Group Vice President and Chief Architect, Core Technology and Cloud, APAC.)