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Showing posts with label OPNFV. Show all posts
Showing posts with label OPNFV. Show all posts

Thursday, June 23, 2016

Huawei: Come 2017, we'll also deal in pure, uncut software

#OPNFV Summit #Huawei is poised to make its big push into flogging pure software products next year - an area its cloudy chief architect believes will come to dominate other parts of the biz.

Speaking at the the open-source network function virtualisation (OPNFV) project summit in Berlin, Uli Kleber, chief architect of cloud platform for its European R&D centre, said: “In the future customers will require pure software, pure hardware or services. So there will be three different types of areas for us.”

While it is still nascent, the software biz will come to dominate, he believes.

“That will include the full portfolio of what companies need to set up a telco network,” he said. Some of those functions have already moved to software such as the company’s virtualised Evolved Packet Core (EPC) technology, he said.

He said: “The deployment of full software products might happen next year in the field. But when we think of real mass deployment, it will take longer.”

He added: “My personal estimation is that will start to grow really fast in the next three years or so. But it will be some time until it is mature enough to go into mass deployment.”

In this brave new world of NFV and #SDN, open source is essential he says.

Interoperability already exists in the telco world but vertically and in the form of boxes, he says. "Now that interoperability needs to be horizontal as it has to run on the cloud platform of other vendors. That is the whole goal of OPNFV.

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2016/06/23/huawei_to_start_flogging_software_only_next_year/

Monday, March 21, 2016

Developers, Open Source Software Changing the Face of Networking

SANTA CLARA, Calf.—It's been five years since Marc Andreessen wrote an essay published in the Wall Street Journal that proclaimed "software is eating the world." By now, we can consider networking just about chewed and swallowed.

We are beginning to realize how much software-defined networking is changing everything. As ON.Lab Executive Director Guru Parulkar puts it, the "softwarization" of networking is not only changing how users manage networks, but everything the network touches.

More precisely, it is open-source software that is leading this movement. Open-source projects like the OpenDaylight and #ONOS (Open Network Operating System) controllers and #OPNFV (Open Platform for Platform for NFV) are driving new business, service and technology models, especially for telecommunications vendors.

http://mobile.eweek.com/networking/developers-open-source-software-changing-the-face-of-networking.html

Thursday, January 7, 2016

Top 5 Virtual Networking Predictions for 2016

Networking is set to be one of the biggest growth industries for open source software development this year, and a key part of that is Network Functions Virtualization ( #NFV ). Set to transform the way networks  are designed, NFV—an initiative to move to the cloud network services that have traditionally been carried out by proprietary, dedicated hardware—has seen explosive growth over the past few years, and that trajectory has only just begun. In fact, analyst firm Infonetics forecasts a fivefold increase in the NFV/ #SDN ( #SoftwareDefinedNetworking ) market by 2019 with more than $11 billion in revenue. That’s huge.

The past year alone saw a tremendous NFV spike with more telecoms testing Proof-of-Concept (PoC) demonstrations to verify real-world applicability; more emerging use cases; and more interest and momentum outside the telecom space. NFV and SDN are on the precipice of reaching critical mass, set to change how networks are architected. Such a transformation is similar to the way in which server virtualization has changed how the internet is built. NFV is bringing the scale and elasticity of cloud architecture to networking.

The Linux Foundation-hosted Open Platform for NFV ( #OPNFV ) Collaborative Project, which was created just over a year ago to help address the growing demand for NFV functionality, is at the forefront of this transformation. Tasked with creating a carrier-grade, integrated, open source platform to accelerate new NFV products and services, OPNFV boasts 56 member companies (including top mobile, wireline and cable operators, chip vendors, and startups), a forthcoming second release and a successful inaugural Summit held this past November. The project’s swelling community demonstrates the hunger for agile solutions that meet evolving network demands.

NFV is poised to move into deployment in 2016. Armed with increased functionality, testing and interoperability—propelled by OPNFV—the market is primed for some bold and innovative milestones over the next year. Here are my top five predictions for NFV this year.

http://www.linux.com/news/featured-blogs/212-heather-kirksey/877217-top-5-virtual-networking-predictions-for-2016