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Entire IT stack in transition

The IT stack is in transition, from end user devices to networks to application design to virtual server software and even storage media. Some of these transitions are well underway and will accelerate in this year while others are just starting to emerge, writes JAY KIDD.

In my 35 years in IT, I have never seen so much simultaneous change in technology. Every part of the IT stack is in transition – end user devices, networks, application design, virtual server software, physical server design, storage systems, and even storage media. Some of these transitions are well underway and will accelerate in 2015 while others are just starting to emerge. Either way, buckle up! IT is going to be a wild ride in 2015.

1.tTwo Mythical Beasts – Internet of tThings and Big Data Analytics – Will tProduce Corporeal Children.

The rise of integrated telemetry in industrial equipment, health monitoring devices, mobile payment systems, along with a host of new sensors measuring the world will provide the relevant data fuel for the next wave of business relevant analytics. Companies that had found their existing datasets were not sufficient to yield real insight can now correlate with real-world datasets to optimize business processes and change their customer’s experience. Acquisition management of data from connected things coupled with real-time and background analytics tools will change how companies touch the world.

2. The Future of All-Flash Arrays is Not All Flash.

Flash is transformative to the future of Enterprise Storage. But the idea of an all-flash datacenter is utter nonsense, and at least 80% of data will continue to reside on disks. Cost matters, and the least expensive SSDs will likely be 10 times more expensive than the least expensive SATA disks through the end of the decade. Compression and deduplication apply to both disk and flash equally. Every storage architecture will incorporate flash to serve the ‚Äòhot’ data. However, those that choose to only include flash, and have no integration with other hybrid flash/disk arrays, will be the hot rod in the garage of IT. Fun to tinker with, but not the reliable storage workhorse IT needs.

3.tA Multi-Vendor Hybrid Cloud is the Only Hybrid Cloud that Will Matter.

Every customer is using cloud in some form. Just as most customers were reluctant to bet on a single vendor for their on-premise IT, they will choose to work with multiple cloud providers. Avoidance of lock-in, leverage in negotiations, or simply a desire for choice will drive them to seek a hybrid cloud that does not lock them in to any single provider. SaaS vendors who offer no way to extract data will suffer. PaaS layers that only run in a single cloud will see less usage. Software technologies that can be deployed on premise and in a range of clouds will find favor with customers thinking strategically about their model for IT.

4.tSoftware Defined Storage Will Build a Bridge Between Public and Private Clouds

Software Defined Storage (SDS), with the ability to be deployed on different hardware and supporting rich automation capabilities, will extend its reach into cloud deployments and build a data fabric that spans premise and public clouds. SDS will provide a means for applications to access data uniformly across clouds and simplifies the data management aspects of moving existing applications to the cloud. SDS for object storage will bridge on-premise and cloud object repositories. The storage efficiencies in some software-defined storage offerings, such as Cloud ONTAP, also reduce the cost of moving data to and from the public cloud, and storing active data in the public cloud for long periods of time.

5.tDockers Replace Hypervisors as the Container of Choice for Scale-Out Applications

As new applications for SaaS or large-scale enterprise use cases are written using the scale-out microservices model, Dockers application containers have proven to be more resource efficient than VMs with a complete OS. All major VM orchestration systems now support Dockers and we will see the emergence of a robust ecosystem for data management and other surrounding services in 2015.

6. Hyper-Converged Infrastructure is tthe New Compute Server

Hyper-converged Infrastructure (HCI) products are becoming the new compute server with Direct-Attached Storage (DAS). Traditional data center compute consists of blades or boxes in racks that have dedicated CPUs, memory, I/O and network connections, and run dozens of VMs. HCI such as VMware’s EVO allows local DAS to be shared across a few servers, making the unit of compute more resilient, while broadly shared data is accessed over the LAN or SAN. Starting in 2015, the emergence of solid state storage, broader adoption of remote direct memory access (RDMA) network protocols, and new interconnects will drive a compute model where the cores, memory, and IOPs storage will be integrated in a low-latency fabric that will make them behave as a single rack-scale system.

* Jay Kidd, Senior Vice President and CTO, NetApp

* Follow Gadget on Twitter on @GadgetZA

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