Intelligent Tech Channels Issue 08 | Page 36

INTELLIGENT DATA CENTRES Finding the right datacentre model for your business How do datacentre managers decide when and how to evolve their datacentres? Naturally, there are pros and cons to each datacentre model says James Young, Director of CommScope's Data Center Practice in Asia Pacific. T here’s no question: the datacentre needs change as business applications change direction, grow or die off. Managers can align their datacentre capacity, choosing to stay with their own on-site capacity or migrate all of their applications to a public, shared cloud. Some may also choose to rent space in a multi-tenant datacentre (MTDC), moving away from their own facilities. There’s also a happy medium in which businesses mix all of these alternatives into their own unique blended solution. So how do datacentre managers decide when and how to evolve their datacentres? Naturally, there are pros and cons to each datacentre model. On-site datacentres In this scenario, managers control their datacentre at their own location. An on-site datacentre improves efficiencies for some 36 business needs. Of course, it also carries maintenance requirements. With no crystal ball as to what will happen in the future, it’s more difficult to scale this investment up or down: guess wrong and the cost of this alternative can be much higher than other choices. All of the activity around cloud computing makes it seem like on-site datacentres are dinosaurs, but there are a couple of different reasons why companies choose to own their own datacentres. For example, some companies have static requirements and perform a significant amount of processing on an ongoing basis, and they have invested in the datacentre capacity to do just that. Over time, they might make changes to the datacentre, but it ends up being more expensive to go into a leased facility or into the cloud unless there’s a good reason to do it, such as changes in operations or technology. Insurance companies and banks, for example, have been using the same applications for a long time; they’re part of the organisation’s core capabilities and are considered to be a strategic advantage. There are also companies that work with large data sets, like oil and gas firms. Moving those large data sets around to different locations – like into the cloud – is very expensive and time-consuming. Also, many enterprise workloads aren’t built or designed for cloud or can’t be virtualised, such as applications written in COBOL for mainframes. Changing those applications and replicating that software in a different environment is a very large and expensive undertaking. At some point, of course, legacy applications such as this will end up being rewritten to run in virtualised or cloud-native environments ssue 08 NTELLIGENT TECH CHANNELS