

In between meeting with customers, Crowdchatting with our communities and hosting theCUBE, the research team at Wikibon, owned by the same company as SiliconANGLE, finds time to meet and discuss trends and topics regarding digital business transformation and technology markets. We look at topics from the standpoints of business, the “internet of things,” big data, applications, cloud and infrastructure modernization. We use the results of our research meetings to explore new research topics, further current research projects and share insights. This is the seventh summary of findings from these regular meetings, which we plan to publish every week.
This week on the Wikibon Friday research meeting, we discussed a key challenge to building systems that combine edge and cloud computing: addressing data differences. Wikibon believes a new data taxonomy will inform hybrid cloud and edge computing system design and related business outcomes.
The digital business systems on the drawing table today are increasingly complex, highly distributed and decentralized. Why? In part, because businesses are trying to exploit edge computing through IoT and mobile engagement applications.
Consequently, Wikibon believes that businesses must distinguish between three “data shapes”: primary data, secondary data and tertiary data. Wikibon’s Neil Raden explains:
We expect to see a lot of new combinations of edge-related devices deployed to work with primary data. These combinations will emanate from operational technology, or OT, companies that have been central to SCADA technology for decades, but it also will include new classes of technology vendor that invent new ways to apply IT to real-time, primary data applications. However, a keen understanding of the problems being solved will be vastly more important than the technology being deployed. Wikibon’s David Floyer explains:
The IT industry will aggressively target the edge, such as with Dell EMC’s recent IQT initiative. However, our expectation is that IT-related technologies and standards will diffuse into primary data applications faster than IT vendors can grab share. Generally, we expect that IT vendors will be successful down to gateways that handle secondary data. Some of these gateways, however, will be significant, depending on data volume, data lineage, processing complexity, and importantly backup/restore requirements.
Tertiary data will end up in the cloud, either in public or in true private cloud options. The cloud systems processing tertiary data will focus on modeling, management, overall data administration and integration with other data and applications. Although tertiary data will feature the least stringent latency constraints, data movement, data persistence and mixed workload costs will be central considerations.
The complexity of highly distributed, highly decentralized edge-related systems necessitates significant collaboration across multiple parties, including OT, IT, the business and an array of suppliers and partners. Users that take a procurement approach to these systems will encounter significant challenges building and operating edge-related systems. Instead, a strategic vendor management approach will be essential. Wikibon’s George Gilbert explains:
Although the technology issues related to cost effectively handling different classes of data are not trivial, the business issues remain a primary concern. Issues such as who owns the intellectual property that’s being created, what level in that hierarchy is central to the business’s operation and differentiation, and how will liability and legal concerns be addressed are all essential to edge-related system design. All firms will in one form or another be impacted by the emergence of the edge as a dominant design, both for their infrastructure and for their business. Using this simple data classification scheme can help professionals better understand the working relationships between OT, IT, business and – crucially – partners.
Action Item: Businesses must begin incorporating edge opportunities into their strategic planning. The tie between strategy and operation will be data characteristics. However, the central concern must be can we use the edge to create a new business opportunity, either to improve our engagement or our operations. Neil Raden explains:
THANK YOU