3. Cloud control plane
Posted: Mon Feb 10, 2025 6:02 am
2. Technologies to Simplify Cloud Computing
Reddy believes that as more workloads move to the cloud, technologies that enable portability, such as container orchestration and cloud workload management, will increasingly appear on CIOs' radars.
“Cloud orchestration technologies enable multi-cloud deployment and hybrid workload management. This ensures portability and avoids vendor lock-in,” he explains. “Cloud workload management solutions help monitor workload/performance, allowing you to shut down unused VMs or launch additional ones dynamically based on established rules.”
In the future, IT leaders will increasingly focus on cloud-native technologies and platforms to fully leverage the underlying capabilities of the cloud to innovate faster and at scale. Gartner predicts that by 2025, cloud platforms will power more than 95% of new digital initiatives (up from 30% of workloads in 2021).
The combination of accelerated cloud adoption and digitally cameroon mobile database workforces has created a larger surface area for cyberattacks. As a result, CIOs are rethinking how to protect their organizations.
“As the new normal leads to a borderless workforce, it has become important for CIOs to rethink the corporate network and understand whether it even makes sense in this new context,” says Reddy. Capgemini has embraced the concept of “Internet as a Network” and plans to create a control plane from which IT will provide role-based access to applications. “This way, we can significantly reduce the traditional corporate network and all the threats associated with providing access to the network,” explains Reddy.
Acting as an air traffic controller for applications, the control plane provides management and orchestration of enterprise cloud deployments.
Reddy believes that as more workloads move to the cloud, technologies that enable portability, such as container orchestration and cloud workload management, will increasingly appear on CIOs' radars.
“Cloud orchestration technologies enable multi-cloud deployment and hybrid workload management. This ensures portability and avoids vendor lock-in,” he explains. “Cloud workload management solutions help monitor workload/performance, allowing you to shut down unused VMs or launch additional ones dynamically based on established rules.”
In the future, IT leaders will increasingly focus on cloud-native technologies and platforms to fully leverage the underlying capabilities of the cloud to innovate faster and at scale. Gartner predicts that by 2025, cloud platforms will power more than 95% of new digital initiatives (up from 30% of workloads in 2021).
The combination of accelerated cloud adoption and digitally cameroon mobile database workforces has created a larger surface area for cyberattacks. As a result, CIOs are rethinking how to protect their organizations.
“As the new normal leads to a borderless workforce, it has become important for CIOs to rethink the corporate network and understand whether it even makes sense in this new context,” says Reddy. Capgemini has embraced the concept of “Internet as a Network” and plans to create a control plane from which IT will provide role-based access to applications. “This way, we can significantly reduce the traditional corporate network and all the threats associated with providing access to the network,” explains Reddy.
Acting as an air traffic controller for applications, the control plane provides management and orchestration of enterprise cloud deployments.