One of the interesting questions raised during my recent enterprise Q&A related to the adoption of cloud-native technology for traditional business applications. An enterprise who’d gone unusually far in assessing cloud-native, to the point of starting a small application test, had developers suspend writing code to answer a basic question about architecture. “How does this…
Cloud-Native Ecosystems Morph to Cloud-Native Products
What we need is cloud for the masses. We’ve failed to realize almost all the heady projections about cloud computing, not because cloud computing couldn’t have met them, but because we couldn’t meet cloud computing on a reasonable footing. Fortunately, that’s starting to change. The most profound thing going on in the cloud today isn’t…
What Issues Shape Operators’ Tech Plans for 2020?
Technology planning, for operators, is the traditional start of their budget cycle. While budgets are usually calendar-year, technology planning typically starts in the second half of September and runs through mid-November. The priorities for each of these planning seasons sets the tone for spending not only in the coming budget cycle, but for several cycles…
Taking a Mission-Focused Look at AI
I blogged last week on the reality of edge computing, and I think that it’s time to take a mission-focused look AI too. We tend, in all of tech, to focus entirely on a new technology rather than asking just what the technology will accomplish. As a result, tech promises turn into hype more than…
Can ONF Stratum Meet its Full Potential?
Industry and standards bodies in telecom have, in my personal view and from my own experience, a bit of a tarnished history. Even the fifty-odd operators I’ve interacted with in the last month think that the activities of these groups take way too long, and a very large majority say the results aren’t “transformative”. Now,…
Can an “Activist Investor” Manage AT&T Better?
Activist investors are always the bane of company management, and AT&T is surely no exception. Elliott Management bought a stake in the company, and that sent AT&T’s stock on a rally. Elliott thinks that AT&T has lowered shareholder value through its aggressive M&A, and management (not surprisingly) disagrees. The question is who’s right and why,…
The Hidden Battle for a Hidden Layer in Operator Networks
Sometimes the interplay of news is more newsworthy than the news itself. Last week we had Ciena’s quarterly report and Cisco’s deal for Acacia, and the two certainly create an interesting combination. Add in the now-almost-routine comments that telco profit per bit is declining and that IP is the dialtone of the connected world, and…
Separating Hype from Reality in Edge Computing
Edge computing is another of those topics on the verge (if not over it) of being over-hyped. Part of the reason is that we don’t really have a solid definition or taxonomy for the space, and part because we haven’t really looked at the business case. I’ve been trying for a year to get some…
A Broader Look at Operator Cloud Plans
Network operators are going to both offer cloud computing services and adopt them internally, but the question is “How?” It’s now looking like internal applications for cloud computing are influencing operator cloud planning more than expected. Last week I talked about AT&T, which is about the only provider I can really talk about in specific…
AT&T’s Interesting Cloud Strategy: A Sign of the Future?
What kind of carrier cloud we finally get, and when we get it, will depend on what drives its deployment. There are a lot of drivers of carrier cloud, and the network operators probably all emphasize them in different ways. It also turns out that there are options for how carrier cloud services are hosted,…