Three Areas I Expect To Hear A Lot About!
Those of you who
have been kind enough to follow Calsoft may know of the wonderful blog our
folks over in pre-sales and marketing put out on a regular basis. The content
is of a uniformly high quality and focused on the technology. Despite that there have been
regular calls from my marketing team as well as from others I meet to start a
blog of my own. I have resisted – only partly because I was not really sure of
what fresh perspective I could bring to the activity. In recent times though, it’s
become quite apparent that the technology has a business side that is perhaps
just as important. Now that this “fresh perspective” has presented itself I
guess I have no choice but to fall in line with my Marketing team’s gentle
prodding so here goes.
In this,
hopefully regular, series of posts I will try to focus on the area of overlap
between the business and technology issues that our customers in the Storage,
Virtualization, Cloud and Networking product space and their end users would
care about. I, and other members of our management team, regularly meet both market
leaders and the most exciting startups in this space. This is a space we have
been serving for over 15 years and we have a unique point of view courtesy the
wide variety of products we have contributed in the development of over that
time. Let me first stick my neck out and deliver some predictions and let me
not stray too far from home base while doing so. A lot of the conversations I
hear when I travel are in one of these three areas and this is what I
hear:
Storage
There is a lot
of hype about Hyper-Converged Storage now and with good reason too given the
drive in Virtualization technology development and adoption. Nutanix has
already crossed the $ 100 Million revenue run-rate and even the folks over at
IDC project that the market for Integrated systems will grow almost three-fold
over the next couple of years to nearly $ 14.3 billion and that much of this
growth will be done to Hyper-converged storage.
What about SSD
and Flash Storage? You can’t escape Moore’s law - SSD adoption will keep
growing as will reliability and application but there are just as many valid
use cases for hard drive based Storage solutions – you can’t wish away such a
widely deployed technology. There is also a fair amount of innovation still
visible in this space – Shingled Magnetic Recording (SMR) and Heat Assisted
Magnetic Recording (HAMR) as examples of ways to increase drive density
Software-defined Storage is also an area that
is seeing a lot of innovation – especially from startups. There is already a
fair amount of activity in the Open Source with already a reasonable amount of
business support – more Enterprise adoption seems likely to follow. VMware
vSphere 6.0, VVOLs and VSAN merit mentions. VMware and EMC is driving the
market a lot. Server Virtualization vendors are obviously suited to the space
as compared to the traditional storage companies. I also expect that there may
well be some attention given to some familiar names too – network backbone
technologies like Infiniband and Ethernet. The fact is storage is getting
faster – the network backbone will obviously have to keep pace.
OpenStack
After 5 years of
being around will this be the year that the Enterprise fully embraces
OpenStack? Most will agree that this move went slower than expected last year
but there are some signs that some large enterprise sectors are looking
seriously at OpenStack – telecom and Retail for example. The other story that
most seem to be highlighting is VMWare’s growing fondness for OpenStack – the
growth of their OpenStack product has been quite positive and they seem set to
continue that focus into this year. Like last year – it’s definitely worth
keeping a close eye on this space.
Cloud
A lot of the
focus here is on Docker – more containers seem headed our way and hence more applications
on the Cloud. A desire to become more accepted within the enterprise seems set
to further drive Hybrid Cloud Strategies like Azure joining Docker. Such
strategies seem set to allow even the smaller enterprises leverage the Cloud
better. Another interesting space to watch will be Cloud Storage – this seems
set for some churn with the kind of pricing models out and about now. We have
already seen some high profile exits – Backup Exec for example and more seem
destined to join that list.
So that’s my
mini predictions for some of the sectors we care about the most. I know not all
of these will come through – what I do know is that there will be a lot of
activity for sure. What do you, the readers of this post, think will dominate
the Storage headlines over the rest of this year?
To know more email: blog@calsoftinc.com
To know more email: blog@calsoftinc.com
Anupam Bhide | Calsoft Inc.
