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Taking Data to the Edge: CDN’s Role Grows in the Data Center The first, and probably most important, point to understand is that there is simply more data traversing today’s internet and cloud ecosystems. At the cusp of the digital revolution, businesses and individual users are using more content, richer applications, and improved experiences. At the core of this technological shift is data and our capability to deliver and control its distribution. A recent Cisco report indicated that metro traffic surpassed long-haul traffic in 2015 and will account for 66% of total IP traffic by 2019. Globally, metro traffic will grow nearly twice as fast as long-haul traffic from 2014 to 2019. The higher growth in metro networks is due in part to the increasingly significant role of content delivery networks (CDNs), which bypass long-haul links and deliver traffic to metro and regional backbones. Furthermore, the report states that content delivery networks will carry over half of internet traffic by 2019. Globally, 62% of all internet traffic will cross content delivery networks by 2019, up from 39 percent in 2014. What we’re seeing is a rapid growth in data utilization and the need to consume this data efficiently. The challenge becomes doing all of this as efficiently as possible while containing costs. Many experts will agree: this is one of the prime reasons we’re seeing a huge boom in CDN platforms. Simply put, we’re taking more and more data to the edge and CDNs are guiding the way. A Growing MarketA recent MarketsAndMarkets report indicated that CDN vendors help organizations in efficiently delivering content to their end users with better QoE and QoS. They store their customers’ content near its target users and secure it from the attacks such as DDoS. This segment is expected to grow from $4.95 billion in 2015 to $15.73 Billion in 2020, the report estimates. These shifts in the ways data is consumed and delivered are changing the way we utilize data center technologies. In 2014, Apple announced its own CDN; Level 3 and Verizon have CDN offerings; even Netflix has its own CDN coupled with its Open Connect platform, through which it partners with ISPs to deliver content more efficiently. There are many others in the mix as well. This has placed added pressure on incumbent CDN providers like Akamai, and there is plenty of competition in the CDN market, where the data center also has its place:
Cisco’s report pointed out that CDN traffic will deliver over half of all internet video traffic by 2019. And, by 2019, 72% of all Internet video traffic will cross content delivery networks, compared with 57% in 2014. Moving forward, organizations will need to find better ways to deliver rich content. This can be as simple as training videos for sales people, all the way to rich media being consumed as a service. The point is that you can create CDN environment both within a partner ecosystem and on your own. Still, optimization around network and content delivery is a must. If this is new ground for your organization and IT team, work with a partner; it’ll be worth it. |
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