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Posts Tagged: cloud

  • Services
    • AI – Artificial Intelligence
    • Cybersecurity Training & Support
    • Cloud Services
    • App Development and Software Integrations
    • Network Connectivity
      • Network Services
    • Voice Services
      • Unified Communications
      • Voice Hardware/ Equipment
      • Telecom Audit & Expense Management
    • Data Center & Colocation
  • About
    • FAQs
  • Blog
  • Contact

Data Centers, Infrastructure Week, and Net Neutrality

June 22, 2017 by Cloud Ogre

Coming off of the heels of last month’s Infrastructure Week we are looking at more and more consolidation in the industry. The core of today’s tech revolution and innovation is dependent upon telecommunications infrastructure and your data center. It remains obscure to many just how and how much of a role they’ll play. Data Center strategy allows companies to build their own cloud with closer proximity to core infrastructure.

Bandwidth and processing hogs like driverless cars will require more bandwidth, more data centers, and more connectivity in remote areas, whether wireless or wireline. That said, we’ll also need greater security woven into the fabric of the network.

Some of the largest acquisitions in the telecommunications and data center space include Digital Realty’s acquisition of TelX and DuPont Fabros, the purchase of Bight House and Time Warner Cable by Charter Communications, Windstream’s acquisition of Earthlink, Altice’s acquisition of Cablevision, and finally CenturyLink’s acquisition of Level3 who’d recently completed acquisitions of Global Crossing and TW Telecom. The above mergers all made sense by creating efficiencies in technology, human capital, and more.But what does that do for competition?

The telecommunications industry is tightly regulated but the move to ISP from Telco is a relatively immature move for regulators who have been at this since the 30’s. In 1984 when long haul and local traffic were broken up and even in ’96 when the RBOCs had to wholesale, regulations weren’t written to account for the architecture of the internet as a whole.

Net Neutrality was presented to the public by most media as stopping “the fast lane to the internet” but that’s not possible given the architecture of the world wide web.  The internet is like a series of highways and Telco providers pretty much control the flow of traffic via their toll booths, or IP routers, and highways or long haul fiber. The true “fast lane to the internet” is space in a data center sitting on top of a dedicated connection into a core IP router. The laws of physics govern the speed that light can travel through glass and a data packet can travel from point A to Z. That said, the data center gets you closer to the core, lowering your latency.

Lobbyist David Redl has recently been appointed to the NTIA National Telecommunications and Information Administration. Many are concluding that he, along with Ajit Pai the Chairman of the FCC, will continue along the road to increased mergers and acquisitions. Many were shocked when Comcast’s offer to buy Time Warner Cable was blocked by the FCC yet Charter’s offer was approved. Customers used to poor service were glad to see that it didn’t go through after having come off of winning Consumerist’s Golden Poo Award and having a viral YouTube video of a customer trying to cancel their service with a rogue Comcast rep.

Some critics say that the telecommunications industry is an inherent monopoly to be viewed in the same light as a utility company so consolidation is to be expected. Others think that less competition will lead to poor customer service and high prices like in the eighties and nineties. What is clear is that the acquisitions keep coming and network architecture is pretty static. Security being a concern that is hot right now really lends to the argument in favor of consolidation as a single network is not only easier to manage, it’s easier to secure and perhaps monitor.

Is SD-WAN marketing hype or next best thing in telecommunications?

June 9, 2017 by Cloud Ogre

Is SD-WAN Hype or Huge?

SD-WAN or Software Defined Wide Area Networking is being touted by many carriers looking to move away from MPLS. It’s a pretty cool tool however its greatest value comes at the carrier network level. That said, AT&T seems to be the leader in comprehensive SD-WAN and Network Based Security development. Contact us for more info and watch the video below from AT&T.

https://youtu.be/sCXgvxcFKbI

Carriers like Comcast are advertising speeds greater than what coaxial cable is capable of carrying due to compression and Software Defined Networking. It is similar to compressing voice to push 46 voice calls over a T1 combined with a cache for static data sets. Not all traffic, unlike voice packets, have real-time, sequential requirements.

HBO’s Silicon Valley’s latest season has entrepreneur Richard looking to build ‘a new internet’ using SD-WAN. Quite apropos given that his compression algorithm enables Software Defined Networking across cell phones to create connectivity. Hence, a device to device ‘new internet’. Is it possible? Who cares??? The cool thing is there’s a popular comedy on HBO that has allows me to geek out on SD-WAN and networking technologies.

Today, end-users have tons of bandwidth available to them. If they don’t, SD-WAN is not going to help. The last mile is still the proverbial long pole in the tent. We’re not connecting cell phones to create a ‘new internet’ with Hooli’s founder. In this non-fiction reality, those cell phones connect to terrestrial wires on the world wide web.

SD-WAN Tech Diagram

How does Software Defined Wide Area Network actually work?

What’s more problematic, Layer 3 transport technologies will never be as secure as layer 2 or layer 1 transport. Contact us to debate that premise or hear us expand on it. What would be cool is to see carriers roll out network based security platforms with great complexity that will have functions like geographic traffic blocking and other advanced firewall capabilities. Security features will ultimately drive the growth in SD-WAN adoption.

In our opinion, bandwidth is cheap and using it more efficiently is not a huge cost saver. SD-WAN is cool but most aren’t rushing to adopt it, though its marketed well. Network based security and transmission technology is constantly being improved. There are much more vulnerable areas in network technology that need to be addressed but access is still key. Redirecting traffic through a dashboard still requires an ability to connect to a site to an IP router. Our customer’s concerns are typically around security at a network level but they’re certainly paying attention to the developments in Software Defined Wide Area Networking technology for enterprises. Contact us if you share the same concerns!