cloud computing & internet of things presenter: bob morrill

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CLOUD COMPUTING &

INTERNET OF THINGS

Presenter: Bob Morrill

Agenda

Both Cloud and IoT are emerging areas with good potential to help reduce costs and get to market quicker

Introduction Cloud

Computing Technology Business Logistics

Impacts

Internet of Things

Technology Business Logistics

ImpactsEstablished and GrowingEmerging and Growing

Introduction

An exponential growth curve is underway radically changing business perceptions of the future.

Rapidly changing technology world Moore’s Law continues for 3-5 years Internet continues to grow

More IP-based end points on the network More data delivered via the Internet More services via Internet hosted systems

CLOUD COMPUTIN

G

Cloud ComputingWhat is it?

Cloud Computing is a shared pool of configurable computing & networking resources that has some type of ubiquitous network access

Data Center

Not all data centers are equally.

Check out the fundamentals:

•Security•Electricity •Connectivity•Cooling

The Secret To Cloud Computing . . .

A hypervisor is a piece of computer

software, firmware or

hardware that creates and runs

virtual machines on a physical

machine.

Bare Metal Examples: Oracle VM Server for SPARC, Oracle VM Server for x86, Citrix XenServer, VMware ESX/ESXi and Microsoft Hyper-V

8

• vCPUs = virtual CPUs = task-specific computing cores• RAM = computational memory = performance• Storage = size of long term data memory =

storage

vCPU StorageRAM

Often represented as vCPUs x RAM x Storage(Example verbal description: “1 times 4 times 200” = 1vCPU x 4GB RAM x

200GB storage)

Basic Cloud Server Components

Cloud Computing Variations

Public Private Hybrid

Why businesses are choosing cloud

2011 Defer server purchases

(46%) Defer/avoid data

center expansion (42%)

Achieve high return on investment (35%)

2014 Achieve IT flexibility and

agility (71%) Deliver services and

applications faster (70%)

Better support business needs (68%)

Source: Stratecast Perspective Apr.2015n = 400

11

Network

Data Center

Storage

Servers

Virtualization

O/S

Database

Data

Applications

Trad

itio

nal

IT:

To

day

, th

e C

ust

om

er m

anages…

Clo

ud

Tra

nsf

orm

s IT

:C

lou

d P

rovi

der

Man

age

sC

ust

om

er

Man

ag

es

Network

Data Center

Storage

Servers

Virtualization

O/S

Database

Data

Applications

Business Value

• Generally better ROI

• Shifts CAPEX to variable OPEX

• IT focus on business

SOURCE: PROFIT BRICKS

Align Capacity To The Business

“ELASTIC”

Business Value Blocks Summary CapEx to OpEx Agility - Speed to Implement Affordability Continuous Improvements Fewer Technical Resources Customization Integration “IT as a Service” - IT is no

longer a cost center Eliminate / Reduce IT Data

Center

Pay As You Go, For Only What Is Needed (Elastic Model)

Instant, On-Demand Access To Resources

Eliminate Lengthy Procurements

Self-Service Oriented

Focus IT Team On What Is Important To The Business

Ready Accessibility To Innovation

Minimal Human Interaction

2015 Adoption StatusCloud is a given; Hybrid cloud is preferred strategy.

93% of organizations surveyed are running applications or experimenting with IaaS

82 % of enterprises have a hybrid cloud

strategy, up 8% from 2014.Enterprise central IT teams take the reins to broker cloud services.

62% of enterprises report that central IT makes the majority of cloud spending decisions.

43% of IT teams are offering a self-service portal for access to cloud services, with an additional 41 percent planning or developing a portal.

Public cloud leads in enterprise adoption; Private cloud leads in workloads.

88 percent of organizations are using public cloud while 63 percent are using private cloud.

13 percent of enterprises run more than 1000 VMs in public cloud, while 22 percent of organizations run more than 1000 VMs in private cloud.

Enterprises anticipate growing public cloud workloads more quickly.

Significant headroom for more enterprise workloads to move to the cloud.

68 percent of enterprises run less than a fifth of their application portfolio in the cloud.

55 percent of enterprises report that a significant portion of their existing application portfolio

is not in cloud, but is built with cloud-friendly architectures.

Cloud Provider Table Stakes . . .

COMPUTE, STORAGE, NETWORKING

APIs ELASTIC SELF-SERVICE ON-DEMAND GLOBAL FOOTPRINT COMPETITIVE HOURLY PRICE

Logistic Considerations Own vs. outsource

NPV studies Current system remaining life Dual systems overlap

Cloud capable software Software licensing

Existing licenses moved to cloud

Usage fees Third party

Contract terms Training

Data jurisdiction Is it a concern?

Data move / conversion Associated costs?

Storage Compression deltas

On-going account / relationship management

Corporate risks Data Security

INTERNET OF THINGSOR THE

INTERNET OF EVERYTHING

Evolution of the InternetB

usi

ness

and S

oci

eta

l

Imp

act

s

Intelligent Connections

• Email• Web

Browser• Search

Connectivity • Social

• Mobility

• Cloud• Video

ImmersiveExperience

s• E-commerce• Digital

Supply Chain

• Collaboration

NetworkedEconomy Connecti

ng:• People• Process

es• Data• Things

Internet of

Things

Digital Business ProcessesDigital

Access to Informatio

n

Digital“The

World”

Digital Social & BusinessInteractio

ns

What is Internet of Things (IoT)?

IoT is not necessarily new . . . New terminology for evolving ecosystem Basic technologies have been around for 20 years Just now becoming cost effective to begin to

deliver everywhere Driven by low cost semiconductor system in a

package / system on chip technologies Compute, memory and network costs at inflection

point to support deployments

Smart World Vision

Internet Growth – IoT Driven

4 BillionConnecte

dPeople

$4 Trillion

RevenueOppty

25 MillionApps

25 BillionIntelligen

tSystems

50 Trillion

GB Data

By 2020Source: IDC

Basic IoT Architecture

Data Center

Sensor(s) /End Devices

IP BroadbandNetwork

Storage

Compute

Database

Analytics

OtherDevices IP Broadband

NetworkOther Applications

OtherPurposes

Arrows represent information flow

Inputs

Outputs

Management Interface

Secure, Authenticated Connection

Controlled, customer access via Web

NetworkSystems

Growing IoT Ecosystem

Sensors / End Devices Many different types

of sensors Major issues include:

Security Proprietary Multiple protocols Non-upgradable

legacy devices

Open access May be differences

for same type of sensor across vertical markets

Power Network Access Replacements

Value Propositions Predictive

analytics ‘Mining’ collected

data for data relationships

Near-real-time control

Real cost savings Enhanced

security

New revenues New business models Automatically

enhanced solutions Cleaner environment Less human

intervention

Logistic Considerations Timing / value

realization NPV studies Legacy system remaining

life Security

Sensor / end devices Privacy issues

“Big Brother” effect Who gets the data? Health Insurance

Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)

Jurisdictional Where is data stored?

Cloud cost considerations Compute Storage Analytics

Data retention How much data do you keep?

Many components & many systems add to complexity Trusted partners End-to-end knowledge /

support Other costs

Broadband, battery replacements, etc.

Summary Value propositions are real Homework is required to get the best deal Use standard financial modeling to understand the

value to your business Watch for hidden fees or other ‘gotchas’ Be mindful of risks such as security and jurisdictions Seek trusted business partners to help alleviate

implementation risks

Bob Morrill BiographyBob Morrill is currently Director of CenturyLink’s Advanced Technology Group which has focuson emerging technologies and business opportunities.  Bob has been actively involved in the telecommunications industry for over 25 years, working for CenturyLink, EMBARQ, Sprint, ALLTEL, Aliant and other telecommunication companies.  Bob has held a variety of positions with these companies including network strategist, corporate strategist, new business development, patent program management, new business opportunity evangelist, development of corporate-wide Network and Product evolution plans, major projects planning, senior technologist, research and development senior manager for switching, data, wireless and access networks, operations manager, engineering manager, and sales engineer.  Bob has over 110 granted patents and pending patents.  Before his telecommunications activities, Bob performed a variety of engineering duties working in Electrical Power Engineering and Transportation industries.  Bob has an MS-EE and BS-EE from the University of Nebraska.  Bob’s specialties include: Broad business and technology knowledge across many telecommunications technologies and architectures and in-depth knowledge in all aspects of IP data networking, patent development, IT systems, major project planning ($B), and expert witness subject matter expertise. Bob can be reached via Linked-In.

To investigate CenturyLink’s cloud services, please see: www.centurylinkcloud.com

 

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