The power of machine learning and artificial intelligence in the data centre

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Data is everywhere – masses of it. And it’s helping businesses to make better decisions across departments. Marketing can utilise data to discover the effectiveness of email campaigns, Finance can analyse past trends to make predictions and projections for the future, and Sales can target their follow-up with detailed information on prospective customers.

But data is only useful when business tools transform it into valuable information. Data intelligence through algorithms and analytics make business data relatable. The most advanced solutions require enormous amounts of data to be able to offer accurate insight to users. As a result, many solutions are cloud based, as most businesses do not have the IT capacity or budget to store this amount of information.

So where does all this data reside? The data centre.

Powering the analytics movement

The data centres that power business applications vary from tiny rooms in office buildings to enormous, purpose-built data halls with their own systems, controlled climates and land-use regulations.

Unsurprisingly, hyper-scale facilities require hyper-scale amounts of energy and water to power them, which is adding to the pressure already facing the world’s natural resources. For example – data centres account for 3% of the global electricity supply and this will likely grow with the increase in data.

The cost of building the very largest facilities can reach billions of dollars, so any mistake, no matter how small, is damaging to a company’s bottom line. Accuracy is crucial in the planning stage to ensure the best return on investment yet many data centres are managed with basic data techniques. And it’s surprisingly common for spreadsheets to be used!

It seems slightly ironic that the data centres providing such advanced data analytics tools are built and run on such basic, unintelligent software.

Using analytics for good

Something has to change. The data centre is business-critical after all, and the more it is viewed as an important strategic asset the better. Interestingly the answer lies in analytics itself.

Business intelligence applications are proving crucial for improving data centre accountability and as a way of delivering tangible benefits across the entire organisation.

The visibility gained from real-time analytics enables executive teams – and the shareholders who hold them to account – to improve the forecasting, construction and management of facilities and to ensure funds are being invested wisely.

This insight is most beneficial during the planning stages. Predictive modelling software assists with site selection, project management and IT purchasing by validating designs and identifying the most economical options. All of this can be decided before a facility is even built, ensuring the best possible chance for success.

These analytics can also be used to calculate and measure natural resource use, including water and fossil fuel consumption. The data centre has a major impact on company CSR policies. Investors are likely to look elsewhere if a company is committed to unsustainable business practices or unable to provide detailed evidence of efforts to improve efficiency and environmental impact.

From a practical management perspective, analytics grants businesses the ability to compare the effects of using different energy and water technologies. This can be analysed over the entire lifespan of a data centre to determine the best choice for the facility and then once built, data can be provided on water and energy use to adhere to company CSR policies.

Turn to the machines

For businesses further along in their analytics journey, there is Artificial Intelligence (AI), Machine Learning and Predictive Analytics. Many cloud-based software applications can and do benefit from these advancements to provide richer data to users. This technology can and should be used for the data centre as well.

Recently Google’s DeepMind AI software showed the financial outcomes from using its own proprietary AI to reduce data centre energy usage. It is important, however, to not solely depend on these emerging technologies as they cannot predict every outcome, especially in the case of human intervention.

Many are still evolving, but even at this early stage utilising these technologies to ensure availability of the facilities that power applications is becoming crucial for data-dependent businesses. There is so much intelligence to be gained across the business, for customers and the business itself, and the data centre is the key to storing and utilising this data. If you’ve come to expect insight from every other department, why should the data centre be any different? 

[session] Data Storage | @CloudExpo @_ANEXIA #DataCenter #IoT #BigData

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In his session at 19th Cloud Expo, Adam Rogers, Managing Director of Anexia, Inc., will discuss how to keep your data legal and still stay in business.

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The question we need to ask is whether this constitutes an example of Hype Hopping: to effortlessly pivot to the next new thing once the previous one turns out to be just a bit less attractive and certainly a lot more complex then we all thought at first. The Gartner Hype Cycle has been calling this for years the trough of disillusionment, a valley that only the strongest of innovations manage to pass in order to reach the slope of enlightenment or even the plateau of productivity that lies beyond.

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A New Integrated Contact Center Suite from Calabrio

Calabrio, a Minneapolis-based software company, has released a new product called Calabrio One, that’ll help customers to store some part of their data on the cloud instead of saving it all on their on-premise systems. Besides storing, it also comes with advanced analytics to understand customers better.

This customer engagement and analytics software company believes this is the next step forward, as more customers are looking to deploy multichannel support and service options for their end customers. In addition, contact centers have adopted an always-on approach, with operations spread across multiple locations around the world. Also, the growing practice of employing a global workforce necessitates a new kind of support infrastructure.

Due to these evolving requirements, contact centers have undergone a digital transformation as they have to provide omnichannel support, and at the same time, have the flexibility to deploy their own Workforce Optimization (WFO) tools in the cloud. Such a complex requirement needs a hybrid cloud approach to data storage, so that users can get both functionality, and ease of use.

To meet these requirements, Calabrio has come up with a unified workforce optimization software suite, after years of development and millions of dollars in investment. Calabrio One comes with the following features:

  • It’s a unified software that handles call recording, analytics, quality assurance, and workforce management.
  • It is based on an intuitive web-based architecture that makes it easy to use for everyone.
  • It has an interactive dashboard, and provides seamless access to data and reporting.
  • The fact that it is a fully integrated suite, is a major attraction for customers, as they prefer it over individual components.
  • It helps with faster decisions, as the data collected through this tool can be shared throughout the organization.
  • Calabrio One provides a high level of flexibility in deployment and administration.
  • This product allows companies to leverage their existing infrastructure in older contact centers, and at the same time, add new contact centers that run in the cloud. This integration is possible with Calabrio One, as it offers a unified interface and consistent user experience.
  • Its Active Architecture is designed to ensure that customers have no downtime whatsoever.
  • It uses Amazon Elastic Cloud Compute Services (EC2) as this is the largest and most scalable infrastructure available in the market today. As a result, data is sure to be secure and available all the time.
  • Calabrio One uses Amazon S3 storage, so users can move their data seamlessly through different storage options.
  • To meet the needs of growing digital interactions, this product uses a complex grid computing architecture to process heavy data coming from contact centers.
  • It uses something called a Smart Capture technology to provide in-depth insights based on customer data.
  • It supports multitenancy by protecting the visibility of each tenant’s data.
  • This suite includes many easy-to-use tools that provide a better understanding of customers.

These features are sure to enhance the efficiency and operations of contact centers, so the company expects more customers to make the switch to Calabrio One.

The post A New Integrated Contact Center Suite from Calabrio appeared first on Cloud News Daily.

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With a slow-growing domestic market and their own consumers increasingly shopping cross border, US e-commerce sites are starting to realize they need to compete globally. But are they ready for it? And are their payment service providers?
A.T Kearney´s “2015 Global Retail E-Commerce Index Report “put it in a nutshell: with the global explosion of e-commerce, being able to effectively sell across borders is going to be a key differentiator between the next round of online-retail winners and losers. By being good at selling across borders, the winners will be able to expand into new markets without the cost of having a physical footprint in those markets(1). This will give them the competitive edge over rivals still locked into just their domestic markets.

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Oracle and Verizon announce latest cloud partnership with SDN at forefront

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Oracle and Verizon have announced a new partnership which aims to ‘make the move to cloud easier for global organisations.’

The deal combines Verizon’s Secure Cloud Interconnect services, which utilises Verizon’s network to transfer data and apps securely to cloud service providers, to create the snappily-titled Verizon Secure Cloud Interconnect for Oracle FastConnect. The combination of software defined networking (SDN) from the Verizon side and in-region connectivity from Oracle is what the two companies are hoping will make it a winner for customers.

“Verizon Secure Cloud Interconnect for Oracle FastConnect allows users to connect to applications simply, securely and reliably,” said Shawn Hakl, Verizon vice president of enterprise networking and innovation in a statement.

“With SDN at the heart of our Secure Cloud Interconnect solution, Oracle customers will find it can deliver an unbeatable combination of performance, control and efficiency to enable their digital transformation.” Diby Malakar, Oracle VP product management, added: “With Verizon’s leading Secure Cloud Interconnect service, Oracle customers can benefit from the latest in networking technology as they continually groom their networks to handle the demands of their business.”

Verizon offers partnerships with eight other cloud vendors through this service, including Amazon Web Services (AWS), Google Cloud Platform, and IBM SoftLayer, while Oracle and Verizon have a cloudy partnership stretching back to 2014.

It has been a particularly busy period for Oracle’s cloud initiatives, dating back to the company’s $9.3 billion acquisition of ERP software provider NetSuite back in July.

Speaking at the company’s OpenWorld event in San Francisco last month, co-founder and CTO Larry Ellison declared that “Amazon’s lead is over” in the infrastructure as a service (IaaS) realm with the release of the company’s next generation data centres, while AWS was also attacked – along with Workday – in Oracle’s most recent financial results, with total cloud revenues approaching $1 billion.

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