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Sunday, September 17, 2017

Huawei wants to grow public cloud market share

#Huawei wants to gain #publiccloud market share and become a dominant public cloud provider, according to Brad Shimmin, an analyst at Current Analysis in Sterling, Va. At its annual #HuaweiConnect event, the Chinese vendor laid out its plans to grow public cloud market share to compete directly with #Google, #Microsoft, #Amazon and #IBM. However, as Shimmin noted, Huawei's plan is not to dominate in the same way as its competitors -- instead the vendor aims to create an open platform that interoperates with other clouds.  Huawei will initially focus its attention on growing public cloud market share among telcos and in its home market, with clients such as China Telecom and China Central TV. Shimmin doubts that Huawei can match other hyperscale cloud providers in scope and scale. Although the vendor recently launched Huawei Enterprise Intelligence AI, Shimmin still sees Huawei's machine learning ranking far behind the AI capabilities of its competitors. "In my opinion, where Huawei is most likely to succeed with its cloud play is in helping partners and customers apply Huawei's significant hardware expertise to trenchant problems like cross-cloud security, AI-scale hardware and IoT edge computing," Shimmin said. Read more of Shimmin's thoughts on Huawei. Achieving container workload performance Dan Conde, an analyst at Enterprise Strategy Group in Milford, Mass., said instead of fretting over competition between containers, virtual machines (VMs) and serverless machines, professionals need to focus on the architecture of new applications. Many emerging applications are geared for microservices and depend on new infrastructure to scale and interoperate. In Conde's view, what really matters with containers and similar technologies is the performance of the workload, not how the workload is actually run. Having choices is vital -- even if it means mixing and matching containers and VMs. The traditional system of underlying platforms and operating systems has been displaced by a much more complicated set of services such as Cassandra, NATS or Apache Spark; cloud platforms; and lower-level offerings such as Apache Mesos or Red Hat OpenShift. "The old notion of a highly curated platform as a service (PaaS) is effectively dead because developers demand choices and the world is changing too rapidly to choose a narrow path. ...The analogy would be the five-year plans of the old planned economies. The current world is too dynamic to go down such a narrow path," Conde said. Dig deeper into Conde's thoughts on container workload performance. Cisco emphasizes LISP for enterprise campuses Ivan Pepelnjak, writing in ipSpace, responded to questions he received from readers asking why Cisco was pushing LISP instead of EVPN for VXLAN-based enterprise systems. While Pepelnjak admitted that he wasn't certain of the exact reasons, he suggested that Cisco and a few other large vendors still see a need for large Layer 2 domains. "It looks like the networking industry is in another lemming rush. Everyone is rolling out VXLAN to solve large VLAN challenges, or even replacing MPLS with VXLAN for L3VPN deployments," Pepelnjak said.

http://searchnetworking.techtarget.com/news/450426421/Huawei-wants-to-grow-public-cloud-market-share

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