CTO power panel: Shaping the future of cloud at the edge – SiliconANGLE News

Edge computing is an adolescent market just starting a growth spurt. Its predicted surge from $3.6 billion in 2020 to $15.7 billion by 2025 comes from the enormous diversity of potential use cases. But like any talented teen, edge technology has to decide exactly what it is, where it belongs, and how its going to get there.

Defining edge, its easier to define what it isnt: Its anywhere that youre going to have IT capacity that isnt aggregated into a public or private cloud data center, said John Roese (pictured, left), global chief technology officer of products and operations at Dell Technologies Inc.

The edge is really the place where data is created, processed and/or consumed, saidChris Wolf (pictured, right), vice president of the Advanced Technology Group, Office of the CTO, at VMware Inc., Whats interesting here is that you have a number of challenges in that edges are different. You have all these different use cases. So what were seeing is you cant just say this is our edge platform and go consume it, because it wont work. You have to have multiple flavors of your edge platform.

Wolf and Roese spoke with Dave Vellante and John Furrier, co-hosts of theCUBE, SiliconANGLE Medias livestreaming studio, during theCUBE on Cloud event. They discussed key technology trends that will shape the future of cloud at the edge, including what belongs at the edge, issues with security and latency, and how to define a software framework for the edge.

There may be many use cases for edge, but not all potential uses are productive ones. After a year of testing with customers, Dell has come up with four major reasons why a company should build an edge platform.

The first is latency: If you need real-time responsiveness in the full closed-loop of processing data, you might want to put it in an edge, Roese said.

But then comes the question of defining the real-time responsiveness necessary for each specific use case. The latency around real-time processing matters, Roese stated. Real-time might be one millisecond; it might be 30 milliseconds; it might be 50 milliseconds. If it turns out that its 50 milliseconds, you probably can do that in a colocated data center pretty far away from those devices. [If its] one millisecond, you better be doing it on the device itself.

The second revolves around requirements for data flow. Theres so much data being created at the edge that if you just flow it all the way across the internet youll overwhelm the internet, Roese said. So we need to pre-process and post-process data and control the flow across the world.

The third question on edge relevancy centers on if the use case requires the convergence of information technology and operations technology. The IT/OT boundary that we all know, that was the IoT thing that we were dealing with for a long time, Roese added.

Fourth and potentially most important is security.

[Edge] is a place where you might want to inject your security boundaries because security tends to be a huge problem in connected things, Roese stated, mentioning the security-enabled edge, or as Gartner named it, secure access service edge, aka SASE. If datas everything, the flow of data ultimately turns into the flow of information the knowledge and wisdom and action. If you pollute the data, if you can compromise it at the most rudimentary levels by putting bad data into a sensor or tricking the sensor, which lots of people can do, or simulating a sensor, you can actually distort things like AI algorithms.

Agility is key to edge, with the COVID pandemic demonstrating how companies with established edge platforms were able to react at speed, according to Wolf.

When you have a truly software-defined edge, you can make some of these rapid pivots quite quickly, he said, giving the example of how Vanderbilt University adapted one of its parking garages to a thousand-bed hospital ward. They needed dynamic network and security to be able to accommodate that.

The software behind the edge needs to be open, according to Wolf. We see open source as the key enabler for driving-edge innovation and driving an ISV ecosystem around that edge innovation, he said.

The first step in defining this currently very complex area is to separate edge platforms from the edge workload, according to Roese.

You do not build your cloud, your edge platform co-mingled with the thing that runs on it. Thats like building your app into the OS, and thats just dumb, he stated.

Recognizing that humans are bad when it comes to really complex distributed systems, is also important, according to Roese, who advocates the use of low-code architectures interfaced via APIs through CI/CD pipelines.

What were finding is that most of the code being pushed into production benefits from using things like Kubernetes or container orchestration or even functional frameworks, he said. It turns out that those actually work reasonably well.

This links with VMwares bet on open source as the software of choice for edge. Multiple Kubernetes open-source projects are currently addressing a variety of edge use cases.

Whether its k3s or KubeEdge or OpenYurt or superedge the list goes on and on, Wolf said. However, he points out that Kubernetes is perhaps not the best approach, as it was designed for data center infrastructure not edge computing.

OS projects that take a different approach include open software platform EdgeX Foundry, which is about giving you a PaaS for some of your IoT apps and services, Wolf said, noting that the solution is currently seeing growth in China.

Addressing machine learning at the edge through a federated machine learning model is the open-source FATE project. And Wolf and VMware are laying bets on this approach. We think this is going to be the long-term dominant model for localized machine learning training as we continue to see massive scale-out to these edge sites, Wolf stated.

Dells long-term vision for edge software is that it really needs to be the same code base that were using in data centers and public clouds, according to Roese. It needs to be the same cloud stack, the same orchestration level, the same automation level, he said. Because what youre doing at the edge is not something bespoke. Youre taking a piece of your data pipeline and youre pushing it to the edge, and the other pieces are living in private data centers and public clouds, and youd like them to all operate under the same framework.

Watch the complete video interview below, and be sure to check out more of SiliconANGLEs and theCUBEs coverage of theCUBE on Cloud event.

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CTO power panel: Shaping the future of cloud at the edge - SiliconANGLE News

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