Just a few
years ago, not many predicted cloud computing would reach the heights we've
seen in 2017 - 79 per cent of companies now run workloads in the cloud (split
almost evenly between public and private clouds). Who knew?
With the cloud bar constantly being raised, where do we go from
here? For a look ahead into future cloud trends, A10 switched on our flux
capacitor and revved our DeLorean time machine to 88 miles per hour to see
what's ahead in 2018:
True hybrid clouds emerge
Hybrid cloud is all the buzz. The ability for enterprises to
have applications run in different infrastructures - public and private clouds
and on-premise with common orchestration and management tools - is enticing.
Multi-cloud, with different workloads running in different clouds and being
managed separately, will become the dominant mode in 2018, while true hybrid
clouds will start to emerge. There are already key technology developments and
partnerships forming to make this a reality. These mash-ups will create hybrid
clouds that truly blend environments and further improve operational agility,
efficiency and scale.
Kubernetes dominates container orchestration
The fight for container orchestration dominance has been one of
the cloud's main events for roughly the past two years. The three-way battle
between Docker Swarm, Kubernetes and Mesos has been fierce. Come 2018, however,
Kubernetes is poised to take the container orchestration title belt and also
become increasingly mainstream with mission critical, scalable production deployments.
Its rich set of contributors, rapid development of capabilities and support
across many disparate platforms make it a clear victor.
Analytics get an AI upgrade
AI is everywhere. It's in our homes with Amazon Echo. And in
2018, it'll be embedded more tightly in IT analytics systems making IT
proactive versus reactive. Through predictive analytics, IT and application
owners will receive actionable information and recommendations. Add to that the
ability to automate their response, and the power of AI becomes more relevant.
Analytics systems will have insight into the behaviour of the infrastructure,
apps and clients.
Serverless computing adoption spreads
One of the benefits of cloud is ease of use for spinning up
additional resources and its pay by use consumption model. Nowhere is that more
evident than in serverless computing. Previously, the unit for additional
compute resource was an instance or VM. Now a "function" has become
an even smaller unit of "use." Putting the onus of managing and scaling
up resources on demand on the cloud provider is cost-efficient and takes the
heavy lifting off of IT. And paying based on a consumption model makes it more
gentle on already strained budgets. Currently available in the public cloud,
next year will see serverless computing start to appear in private cloud
deployments as well. While it won't become mainstream, wider adoption will
happen in the short term.
Custom cloud instances proliferate
As cloud adoption grows, compute instance types will become further
segmented and optimised for specific use cases; enabling improved performance
and new use cases. Next year will see growth in the number of
application-specific instance types within clouds - from big data and
AI-optimised instances to high network performance and very large memory types.
Custom optimized applications that take advantage of these capabilities will
start appearing.
Bonus prediction: Kiss cloud security concerns goodbye
Security is noticeably absent from our list of cloud predictions.
Why? Simple. It's time to move on. Yes, security is always important, and even
more so in the cloud. But it's no longer the hindrance it was when cloud was
early stages. Over the years, cloud and services available on the cloud have
matured. There is more security built in. More tools are available from
vendors. Compliance in the cloud has caught up. As with all IT, it's imperative
to think about security capabilities, policies and governance when deploying
clouds or making a major change to your infrastructure, but in 2018 cloud will
no longer be considered not secure by default.
In the cloud world, things move swiftly. That's just a snapshot
of what we think Doc and Marty will see if they take the DeLorean into next
year. There will certainly be more big headlines in cloud as more people find
innovative ways to consume it.
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