Intelligent CIO Middle East Issue 53 | Page 29

INFOGRAPHIC operations (AIOps) will be necessary to help monitor complex environments across the Edge, the core and the cloud. 2. Hardware-based composable architecture will have less short-term potential against commodity hardware and software-based infrastructure virtualisation. Continued improvements in commodity hardware performance, software-based virtualisation and microservice software architectures will eliminate much of the performance advantage of proprietary hardware-based composable architectures, relegating them to niche data centre roles soon. The advent of 5G is what AI-driven IoT has been waiting for. 2020 will see many players in the technology industry and business community invest in building Edge Computing environments to support the reality of AI-driven IoT. These environments will make possible new use cases that rely on intelligent, instantaneous and autonomous decision-making, with low-latency, high-bandwidth capabilities. This evolution will bring us to a world where the Internet will work on our behalf, without even having to ask. This AI-driven IoT innovation, however, will depend on a massive prioritisation of Edge Computing, further disrupting IT infrastructures and data management priorities. As Edge devices move beyond home devices (such as connected thermostats and speakers) and become more far-reaching (such as connected solar farms), more data centres will be placed at the Edge. Also, platforms such as Artificial Intelligence for IT Hardware-based composable architecture is being hyped as the next evolution of hyperconverged infrastructure (HCI). This architecture enables CPUs, networking cards, workload accelerators and storage resources to be distributed across a rackscale architecture and to be connected with low-latency PCIe-based switching. And although composable architecture does have potential, standardisation has been slow and adoption has been even slower. Meanwhile, software-based virtualisation of storage, combined with software-based (but hardware-accelerated) compute and networking virtualisation solutions, offers much of the flexibility of hardware-based composable architectures today with lower cost and consistently increasing performance. This year, attempts to build a true hardwarebased rack-scale computing model will no doubt continue and the space will continue to evolve quickly. However, most organisations that must transform within 2020 will be best served by a combination of modern HCI architectures (including disaggregated HCI) and software-based virtualisation and containersation. • www.intelligentcio.com INTELLIGENTCIO 29