Intelligent Data Centres Issue 13 | Page 21

INDUSTRY INTELLIGENCE POWERED BY THE DCA INDUSTRY INTELLIGENCE POWERED BY THE DCA Is the industry on the Edge of a great opportunity? The term ‘Edge Computing’ is now widely used among business leaders as we discover more about its potential. Stephen Whatling, Chairman at Business Critical Solutions, discusses how Edge Computing is contributing to the development of the data centre landscape to support the growing demand for connectivity and availability. T The changing landscape The data centre landscape is fundamentally changing and alongside the hyperscale development we are also seeing an increasing market towards Edge data centres to support a growing need for greater connectivity and data availability. While the decentralised data centre model has been around in various guises for some time, it fell out of favour for a lot of businesses as they sought to exploit the efficiencies of operating fewer, larger data centres. However, the phenomenal growth of the Internet of Things (IoT) is driving a resurgence in its popularity. Cisco is predicting that in the five years up to 2022, 1.4 billion Internet users will have been added, there will be 10.5 billion more devices and connections and broadband speeds will have increased by over 90%. Only Edge networks can provide the high connectivity and low latency required by the IoT to meet users’ expectations and demands for instant access to content and services. The rise of AI In addition, the rise of AI and immersive technologies such as Virtual and www.intelligentdatacentres.com Augmented Reality (VR/AR) is also a factor that will help drive this move. While not perhaps mainstream yet, many sectors are assessing the benefits. For example, in the manufacturing environment the now ubiquitous robots on many production lines can be improved and their role expanded by AI. A report found that 92% of senior manufacturing leaders believe that the ‘smart factory’ will help them increase productivity and empower their staff to work smarter, but a similar Forrester report also found that only one in eight large manufacturing businesses are using any form of AI. However, these kinds of innovations require a lot of computing power and an almost immediate response as a single machine that ‘pauses for thought’ could create a knock-on effect that causes immeasurable damage to the factory, production line and productivity. Once again, Edge Computing is best placed to support this. In the case of AI and AR, speed is an important factor. In the Edge, decision- making is held closer to the point of need and as a result the reduction in latency between the device and the processing power enables a much faster response time. Equally important, the data itself Issue 13 21