IBM marries on-premises, private and public-cloud data
IBM has taken the wraps off of a new multi-cloud integration platform it hopes will help customers manage, secure and integrate data no matter where it resides – on-premises, private-cloud or public-cloud applications.
Enterprise customers are faced with the daunting task of bridging legacy applications with latest cloud service, and many cannot just lift and shift, said Juan Carlos Soto, IBM vice president of hybrid cloud integration. On top of that many businesses are already trying to manage five or more cloud environments, often from multiple vendors, and they cannot keep up, he said.
IBM’s Institute for Business Value estimates that by 2021, 98% of organisations plan to adopt hybrid architectures, but just 38% will have the procedures and tools they need to operate that environment.
Specifically the ICP runs on Big Blue’s IBM Cloud Private environment which can manage Kubernetes and other containers. The ICP includes a number of existing IBM offerings that include the following.
IBM MQ is software that simplifies and accelerates the integration of applications and business data across multiple platforms. It uses message queues to enable the exchanges of information and offers a single messaging system for cloud, mobile, Internet of Things (IoT) and on-premises environments. IBM says by connecting virtually everything from a simple pair of applications to the most complex business environments, MQ helps organisations improve business responsiveness, control costs, reduce risk and gain real-time awareness from mobile, IoT and sensor data.
Enterprise-grade
Enterprise-grade Kafka: Specifically IBM Event Streams is a platform built on the popular open source Apache Kafka big data technology and a key open-source technology that underpins responsive and intelligent applications. Event Streams helps organisations focus on writing applications rather than deploying middleware. It enables customers to deploy mission-critical workloads and helps them connect new applications to existing infrastructure, IBM says.
The platform also includes support for integrating siloed application on premises and in the cloud with support for key APIs such as REST, IBM said.
Coding time
The idea is that with all the integration components of the platform customers can cut coding time and costs by reusing assets they are familiar with, Soto said.
Offering a multi-cloud, portable hybrid integration solution is important for IBM in a few ways, said Cassandra Mooshian, a senior analyst with Technology Business Research. It greatly reduces the perception of vendor or platform lock-in, which in the world of hybrid IT is attractive, Mooshian said.
“It underscores that IBM is willing to play in a multivendor world (rather than promoting IBM IaaS as the technology underpinning ICP and solutions atop it), it can help bring IBM to the table more often in enterprise and midmarket organisations now that it is ‘playing nice’ more often with peers, and it addresses a fundamental pain point that IT departments are facing, linking on-prem apps and data to cloud apps and data such that processes can become more efficient and customers can get the most business value,” Mooshian said.
The Cloud Integration Platform was just one of a number of IBM cloud announcements that emanated from its Think 2019 gathering this week in San Francisco. Others included:
Watson AI for all: Until now IBM’s Watson ran only on Big Blue’s Cloud Private system but that changed this week. The company announced that customers running Amazon, Google, Microsoft and other cloud services will be able to take advantage of Watson’s intelligence by being able to run IBM Watson services, including Watson Assistant and Watson OpenScale. IBM said with Watson, customers will be able to apply AI to data wherever it is hosted and with its set of applications, development tools, machine-learning models and management services. Watson can help organisations mine data, predict outcomes and automate time- and resource-sensitive processes. Companies can also develop conversational services such as virtual customer-service agents, IBM said.
Hyper-security: Built on IBM LinuxONE technology, which features pervasive encryption support, IBM Cloud Hyper Protect Services is aimed at securing Big Blue’s public-cloud offering. The service will provide encryption-key management with a dedicated cloud hardware security module (HSM) built on FIPS 140-2 level 4-based technology.
Cloud at your service: IBM rolled out a service customers can consult with to build hybrid-cloud environments. IBM Services is establishing dedicated teams of consultants certified in the latest services and technologies across multiple cloud platforms.
Multi-cloud management: The company has added IBM Services for Multicloud Management to provide a single system to help enterprises manage IT resources across multiple cloud providers, on-premises environments and private clouds. The service lets customers track costs and monitor service levels among other tasks.
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