There are clearly a lot of things going on in the telecom space. For well over a decade, operators have been experiencing erosion in revenue per bit. Some, particularly in areas like the EU where competition is fierce, have sought subsidies from big-tech firms to compensate for the traffic they add, traffic users themselves are unwilling to pay for. Neutrality rules change in the political winds. Businesses, under pressure to do more with less, are looking for ways to replace the costly busin...| Andover Intel
Enterprises, asked what the relevant 6G features could be, will say “low latency” almost 3:1 over all other options combined. But why is latency relevant? The answer, interestingly, of almost half those who cite it reduces to “I don’t really know”. The rest say that it would be relevant to promote the availability of hosted edge computing. OK, but would it? Let’s take a look.| Andover Intel
There has, for years, been a potential for the cloud providers’ networks to create competition for enterprise networks based on MPLS VPNs. I noted in an earlier blog that enterprises were seriously looking at reducing their WAN costs by using SD-WAN and/or SASE. This obviously generated an opportunity for cloud providers to offer WAN services, and also for someone to offer multi-cloud interconnect. Maybe it also offers more, as Fierce Network suggests.| Andover Intel
In my blog yesterday about the future of operator network services and infrastructure, I mentioned the possibility (well, maybe “hope” would be more accurate) that the 6G initiatives might address some issues in a useful way. Since we’re at least five years from a solid idea of what 6G is going to do (we might get an idea of what it’s targeted at in three years, but not how it will deploy), can we even see a glimmer of direction? I got some views from both operators and vendors, and (...| Andover Intel
I went back over some of my own writing a decade or two ago, and it made me wonder how much we could hope to uncover about the future of network infrastructure for service providers a decade or more from now. Everyone loves transformations; they generate interest for us and clicks for publications and advertisers. Can we expect one?| andoverintel.com
What network models are enterprises looking at for the future? How might the network of 2028 differ from that of 2025? I got some information from 294 enterprises that offer some answers to these questions, but they also point out that there are many different drivers operating on networks over the next three years, and these drivers impact enterprises based on things like the vertical market they’re part of, the size of the company and their office sites, and the unit value of labor and na...| Andover Intel
One of the biggest, and yet least-recognized, challenges enterprises face in software deployment these days is addressing non-transactional models of application workflow. We’ve spent decades understanding and populizing online transaction processing (OLTP), in large part because for decades that’s the only kind of application you found at the core of businesses. That’s changing today, in part because we’re changing what enterprises do with applications (and through them, with their w...| Andover Intel
Enterprises have always managed their networks, but just how that’s done has always had its own twists and turns. The common thinking is expressed by the FCAPS acronym, meaning fault, configuration, accounting, performance and security, and this is what we could call the “prescriptive” thinking. But enterprises themselves seem to recognize some higher-level issues, mostly relating to the relationship between QoS, QoE, and “fault”.| Andover Intel
We’re still waiting for movement by someone on DoJ’s opposition to the HPE/Juniper deal. Meanwhile, the two companies, their customers, and their competitors are all gaming out the results of the possible outcomes. That’s difficult because we can’t be sure why HPE or Juniper wanted the deal in the first place.| Andover Intel
Here’s a seemingly obvious truth for you; there’s no such thing as an infinite TAM. Any market can be saturated, and as saturation approaches all markets can expect to see a slowdown in growth rate. So it is with wireline broadband in general, and cable broadband in the US in particular, according to a Light Reading piece. The thing that I find interesting about these discussions is that people are happy to talk about the trend and seemingly reluctant to accept the cause. Is increased com...| Andover Intel