Networks Europe Mar-Apr 2018 | Page 22

22 CLOUD COMPUTING xxxxx Driving efficiency Simon Bearne, Commercial Director, NGD www.ngd.co.uk The data centres behind the complex and demanding cloud structures of tomorrow Cloud services can be expected to deliver on the IT requirements of thousands, even tens of thousands of organisations. Raising the stakes even further, users increasingly demand hybrid solutions that give them the best of all worlds by being able to seamlessly interconnect private and public clouds together. Many user organisations also have a practical need to encompass legacy IT workloads that can operate alongside the hybrid cloud environment. Furthermore, there’s a growing trend towards multi-tenanted private clouds being offered by some service providers. These developments are placing even more onus on the resilience and efficiency of the data centres behind such complex and demanding cloud structures. Some of the major public cloud providers are taking steps to make the development and deployment of hybrid solutions more straightforward. The newly launched Microsoft Azure Stack, for example, is intended to allow organisations to run Microsoft Azure IaaS and PaaS services directly within their own data centres, whether in-house or in their chosen colocation facility. On paper, this allows them to enjoy the full range of public Microsoft Azure services on their own hardware, while also moving private workloads seamlessly between their chosen data centre and the Azure public cloud. The major advantages here are continued ownership of core and mission-critical applications in a private cloud, while also receiving the added benefits of continuous software updating and automated backups delivered with Azure public cloud service. Such initiatives are clearly essential for getting hybrid clouds well and truly off the ground. There are many organisations out there, especially more heavily regulated ones, demanding the retention of private cloud infrastructures and certain legacy systems which cannot be moved into a cloud-based infrastructure. An organisation might be happy enough using an Internet-based public cloud development platform for testing new applications, but not once it goes into production due to security, latency and privacy issues. In practice, whether in-house, collocated or both, the need for modern data centre infrastructures is inescapable; infrastructures capable of supporting the exponential www.networkseuropemagazine.com