Intelligent CIO Africa Issue 19 | Page 42

FEATURE: BIG DATA gap that exists. Complicating matters is the dynamic and continually changing nature of data and its associated requirements. But there are positive signs. Recognising the importance of data in the country, universities are introducing degrees in Big Data science. For its part, those businesses invested in data analysis and the related solutions and technologies should also work with tertiary institutions in providing the expertise required to assist with the curriculum. Data is not going to go away. Modern enterprises need to evolve from policy-based to behaviour-based data management and is going to require even more data-savvy specialists to move to the next level. GRANT BENNETT, COUNTRY Grant Bennett, Country Manager: South & MANAGER: SOUTH AFRICAN African & Sub-Saharan Africa, SUSE SUSE SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA, Data growth is not like economic growth or growth on savings in a bank – a sluggish few percentage points grudgingly added over long periods – it’s incredibly rapid, long into double figures and the interest rate is compound. In fact, many have described this growth as explosive – which, if not managed correctly has the connotations of damage. For instance, while storage costs might have come down a lot over the last few years, those savings are more than negated by the volume growth rate, creating major issues for many, as reduced capital spending has become the norm. As a result, though businesses are still looking at ways to ‘do more with less’, we have reached the limits of ‘if it isn’t broken, don’t fix it’ – yet everyone knows things have to change. But how? Well some things are crystal clear when we look at the growth of Big Data: 1. Outside of the ‘hyperscalers’ hardly anyone will be able to afford to own and host all their compute power on premise. In the future, a proportion of your compute power is going to be in public clouds, one way or another, sooner or later. 2. Storage growth is massive and unsustainable. You are going to need to 42 INTELLIGENTCIO ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// find a better, cheaper way of doing it, and that way is going to need to work in harmony with your compute decisions. 3. Vendor lock-in is never a good idea. In a world where business models change, discovering you’re locked into a cloud provider might be one of the most unpleasant discoveries of your life. Analysing Big Data presents huge opportunities for innovation and growth, but big challenges as well. Businesses today need high performance computing solutions to solve data intensive problems and keep pace with growing processing needs. What’s more, because of the clouds’ on- demand model, many enterprises see it as a cost-effective way to access the multitude of computing resources required for processing Big Data. This is also where software-defined storage (SDS) comes in – especially if we consider that by 2020, between 70 and 80% of unstructured data will be held on lower- cost storage managed by SDS environments. Businesses are moving too fast and creating enormous amounts of data to rely on storage architectures that are proprietary, overpriced and inflexible. At the same time, IT is also challenged with organising storage assets as a bridge between new and old, with the same level of performance across locations and classes. Truly unlimited scalability enables enterprise IT organisations to deliver the agility businesses demand by non-disruptively adding capacity at the cost they want to pay. This in turn allows organisations to spend more time focused on analysing and utilising the data to deliver future Kate Mollett, Regional Manager for Africa South at Veeam innovations to the business, rather than worrying about storage. The shift toward SDS is also largely driven by a substantial cost reduction without compromising a previously commoditised technology. With future storage demands growing exponentially to account for Big Data, having technology that’s handled as an operating expense can also lead to a huge cost reduction. Big Data is now on the doorstep of organisations across all sectors. To get maximum value, businesses need to be able to rapidly process huge sets of varied data in a cost-effective way but to do that, they need the right foundation to overcome barriers and capitalise on the valuable data that exits in the organisation. n BUSINESSES TODAY NEED HIGH PERFORMANCE COMPUTING SOLUTIONS TO SOLVE DATA INTENSIVE PROBLEMS AND KEEP PACE WITH GROWING PROCESSING NEEDS. www.intelligentcio.com