Insight

  • Impact of Containers on the Network

    The rapid adoption of containers to support modern application environments is having a significant impact on IT and the underlying technology. This is especially true for the network team, where container adoption is impacting existing network architectures and creating new challenges. As is the case with most transitions, there is a temptation to resist change, but as time and previous technology transformations have demonstrated, these changes must be embraced. Organizations need to ensure that the network is in a position to accelerate the adoption of new technologies.

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  • Container Usage Trends

    Hybrid has become the de facto cloud strategy for most organizations and will likely remain so for the foreseeable future. At the same time, there is a lot of discussion in the market regarding modern or cloud-native application environments as organizations look to shift from infrastructure-focused to application-centric management, but what is the reality of container environments in enterprises? ESG research confirms that not only has the adoption of containers been steady—and will continue to be—but also that this usage will play an increasing role in supporting production application environments.

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  • Security analytics and operations can be complex, requiring highly skilled professionals and detailed processes. To overcome these issues, security teams tend to deploy an array of security analytics tools and technologies to collect, process, analyze, and act upon growing volumes of security telemetry. Despite this investment, however, many organizations continue to find it difficult to manage cyber risk or detect and respond to cyber incidents.

    How can CISOs address these issues and develop effective security analytics and operations processes? In order to get more insight into these trends, ESG surveyed 406 IT and cybersecurity professionals at organizations in North America (US and Canada) involved with the planning, implementation, and/or operations of their organization’s information security policies, processes (including purchase decisions), or technical safeguards and familiar with their organization’s collection and/or analysis of security data in support of information security management strategy

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  • ESG conducted an in-depth survey of 358 IT professionals concerning their organizations’ usage of, experiences with, and future plans for leveraging on-premises infrastructure and public cloud services together in the form of a hybrid cloud strategy. Survey participants represented midmarket (100 to 999 employees) and enterprise-class (1,000 employees or more) organizations in North America (United States and Canada).

    This research uncovers important trends in the hybrid cloud landscape, such as:

    • The significance of on-premises integration
    • Key objectives of hybrid cloud strategies
    • Split preferences in application migration approaches
    • The desire for management consistency

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  • Trends in Modern Application Environments

    ESG conducted a comprehensive online survey of IT professionals and software developers at private- and public-sector organizations in North America (US and Canada) between June 7, 2019 and June 17, 2019. To qualify for this survey, respondents were required to be responsible for supporting their organization’s application development environment, including their plans and strategy for containers technology. All respondents were provided an incentive to complete the survey in the form of cash awards and/or cash equivalents.

    This Master Survey Results presentation focuses on the current state of application development architectures and methodologies in use in enterprise environments, specifically usage of and plans for containers technology.

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  • Actifio Triples Down on Modern Intelligent Data Management

    intelligent-data-managementActifio just announced a new version of its platform, Actifio 10C, and it comes with a bunch of goodies just in time for year-end festivities. The version numbering itself reveals a triumvirate of themes around the letter C: cloud, containers, and copy data. While the first too are critical in supporting the “how to” or “where,” the third (copy data) is really about the ability to further leverage data assets, an area in which I believe Actifio has done better than others. 

    This new version does reinforce the key capabilities that have made Actifio successful, which is data protection/recovery at scale. Scale is everything for enterprises, and it requires performance and flexibility. Our research shows data protection is not only moving to the cloud, it is expected to be as efficient as possible (achieving strict RPOs and RTOs) and cost-optimized. Recovery is critical for successful cloud-based data protection. In this version, there are many cloud-related improvements such as one-click multi-cloud orchestration and restore (automated DR at scale), and advances in leveraging object storage (more performance at a fraction of the cost) with intelligent caching including direct S3-compatible object storage recovery. Net net: faster, at scale, and cost-effective recovery in multi-cloud.  

    Our research also shows that cloud will play an increasingly important role in intelligent data management or data reuse, which is not that surprising given the significant advances and services cloud providers offer today. Cloud tops the list of intelligent data management topologies. 

    In 10c, Actifio adds rapid cloning of databases to containers to accelerate application test and release cycles. In essence, end-users can reuse backups backups to instantly clone multi-Terabyte databases leveraging Kubernetes-managed containers. The benefit is obvious: one data set can be leveraged across multiple test instances and only changes get stored. I am tempted to call it “parallelized data reuse.” It’s also self service, which means a QA team, for example, will be autonomous, and not depend on other parts of IT. Cost optimizations therefore occur in 2 areas:  storage and operational efficiencies. Business optimization should stem from the ability for developers or QA teams to do their job better and faster, which helps the top and bottom lines.  Actifio also integrates with Dev/Ops leading tools.  

    Data reuse generates broad business benefits. Our most recent research highlighted the main areas in which organizations that implement secondary data reuse, or intelligent data management, can benefit. We believe that data reuse is critical to lower business risk and to foster business growth and expansion. Stay tuned for more on this topic in January. Version 10C adds wizards for mission-critical databases like SAP HANA/ASE/MaxDB, Oracle, Oracle EBS, MS SQL, Db2, and other enterprise databases with incremental-forever application-consistent backup, instant recovery, and rapid database cloning for test/dev anywhere (on-premises or in AWS, Azure, GCP, and IBM Cloud). 

    With this new release Actifio is well positioned to capture more business and further its market presence as the “Go”-to (pun intended) intelligent data management platform. Our research shows that intelligent data management (heavily predicated on data reuse) is where the backup and recovery market is going. It looks as though Actifio is going there faster than others. 

  • Cloud-scale Security Analytics Survey

    ESG’s Master Survey Results provide the complete output of syndicated research surveys in graphical format. In addition to the data, these documents provide background information on the survey, including respondent profiles at an individual and organizational level. It is important to note that these documents do not contain analysis of the data.

    This Master Survey Results presentation focuses on the current strategies used for security analytics and operations, including the impact of public cloud resources for processing and storing large and fast growing volumes of security data.

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  • Intel Acquires Habana Labs for $2 Billion

    Intel-acquiring-Habana-LabsFor the last few years, the processing space has been red hot. Between startups and mainstay chip vendors, it’s an ongoing arms race to address the specialized needs of modern workloads and applications in core data centers, at the edge, and in the public cloud. In fact, when ESG asked respondents to cite the aspects across the entire data pipeline that are most frequently responsible for causing delays, the top response was data processing. Organizations want speed, reliability, and cost effectiveness. And to get there, it’s forcing organizations to rethink their approach to computing, especially with the rapid adoption of AI technologies fueling the booming compute market.

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  • Cisco’s Plan to Build the Internet for the Future

    Last week, I attended Cisco’s #InternetForTheFuture event in San Francisco. This was a major announcement for Cisco and marked their entry into selling merchant silicon and optics developed by Cisco. Specifically, it announced Silicon One, the 8000 series portfolio with IOS XR7 and a line of optics solutions

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  • CCPA Is Coming…Part 2

    data-regulationThe California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) goes into effect on January 1, 2020. Often compared to GDPR, CCPA protects consumers from mismanagement of their personal data and gives consumer control over what data is collected, processed, shared, or sold by companies doing business in California. I recently chatted with my friends and colleagues Dave Littman from TruthInIT and Steve Catanzano, Senior Consultant at ESG. 

    You can find our video chat here.

    Focusing on the impact of this act on companies’ infrastructure, their storage, their data protection, and their archiving, it is clear that this is a regulation that forces companies to really start thinking more about their data and reusing that data as well.

    In the video, Stephen Catanzano explains, “Data reuse is important. Things like encryption, data masking, all these tools that exist today are tools that companies need to start taking very seriously to protect consumers data. And this should have a major impact on the amount of data that they store, where the data is, creating a whole level of intelligence around their resources that they have in place, and making sure that they meet these compliance…

    CCPA is something that is hitting home in the California market. We think it’s going to extend into other markets as well. So really focusing on data management, data intelligence is going to help companies in meeting this regulation as well as being more efficient within organizations.”

    I add, “In order to do business with California, you are going to have to be compliant. It’s the fifth economy or sixth economy in a world…It’s going to make it even more obvious for those organizations that do not necessarily deal in a lot of international business when it comes to the collection of data. It’s very restrictive and it has some fines. I think it’s $750 per incident per user. So if you have millions of consumers and you’ve done something wrong and you’ve been somehow you’ve exposed that data and it’s considered to be non-compliant, you can do the math. It’s going to be pretty, pretty bad.”

    So we know the players in the data protection space, in the archiving space, and in the storage space. As the technology stands right now, are those features and functions there to comply? Or is it going to be that these vendors are going to have to produce new features and functions to enable their customers to comply? 

    In closing, Stephen Catanzano sums this idea up: “It’s vendor specific. Many of the vendors have gotten ahead of this already, especially with GDPR and they understand what tools need to be in place and what the process needs to be to comply. It’s up to the customers to be using those tools effectively. And so they do exist, it is just a matter of policies and procedures that you need to put in place. One example is companies have the right or individuals will have the right to ask their data to be deleted. And that’s a complicated problem. If you don’t have all your day and organized and you know that you can go to your primary data, your backup data, your dev/ops, storage, everything else and remove that data, then you’re not in compliance with the regulations. That is when you get the fines as well. So people need to know. People can ask where the data is. They can ask how you’re storing it, how are you managing, why you have it, you need to respond very quickly. And then if they say you’re holding it inappropriately or you shouldn’t have my data, then they can ask for it to be removed. That’s a big challenge for IT.”

    For more information on CCPA, check out our complimentary brief.

  • Cybersecurity services – omnipresent and heavily invested in

    ESG conducted an in-depth survey of 220 cybersecurity professionals concerning their organizations’ usage of, experiences with, and future plans for cybersecurity services. Survey participants represented small (50 to 99 employees), midmarket (100 to 999 employees), and enterprise-class (1,000 employees or more) organizations in North America (United States and Canada).

    This research report reveals how cybersecurity service providers can answer IT’s call for help with advisory, implementation, incident, outsourcing, testing, and specialty services, and also covers purchasing trends.

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  • 2019 Digital Work Survey

    ESG conducted an in-depth survey of 1,033 full-time employees concerning the changing role that technology plays in their work and personal lives. Survey participants represented full-time employees working for organizations with more than 20 employees in North America (US & Canada).

    Survey participants represented a wide range of industries, company sizes, functional groups, seniority levels, and worker types. For more details, please see the Research methodology and Respondent demographics sections of this report.

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