IDG Contributor Network: What does the future hold for the IT services industry?
It would probably be an understatement to say the IT services industry is spooked by the recent financial results reported by major IT services providers. Both the top and the bottom lines have been under pressure. The medium-term future, and even the shorter term, have become unpredictable. Results are inconsistent, and companies have softened their guidance on future growth rates.At the same time, tech spend around the world is increasing. At the NASSCOM Product Conclave in Bangalore a couple of months ago, I was struck by the buoyancy of the start-up market. India alone is home to more than 5,000 start-ups, and this number is slated to more than double by 2020. There is no doubt the tech love affair will continue to heat up as new innovations continue to spring from both unlikely garages and sophisticated computer labs alike.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here
Like Nasuni and Ctera, the startup is rethinking storage for the hybrid cloud.
Regardless, recent work in Flowspec is quite interesting; particularly the ability to redirect flows, rather than simply filtering them. Of course, the original RFCs did allow for the redirection of flows into a VRF on the local router, but this leaves a good bit to be desired. To make such a system work, you must actually have a VRF into which to redirect traffic; for one-off situations, such as directing attack traffic to a honey pot, building the VRF and populating it can be more work than capturing the traffic is worth. A newer draft, draft-ietf-idr-flowspec-path-redirect, aims to resolve this.
The group will act as a clearinghouse for data that is relevant to the Internet of Things.
Paradox: SD-WAN makes some things simpler, but others more complicated.