Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) today announced HPE Edge Orchestrator,
a SaaS-based offering that enables telcos to deploy innovative new edge
computing services to customers via IT infrastructure located at the
edge of telco networks or on customer premises. With the HPE Edge
Orchestrator solution, telcos can extend their offerings to include a
catalog of edge computing applications which customers can deploy with a
single click, across hundreds of locations. HPE Edge Orchestrator
enables telcos to monetize the 5G network and telco cloud while bringing
lower latency, increased security and enhanced end-user experiences to
their customers.
Analysts
expect the next decade to see the rise of edge computing where data
intensive workloads such as AI, machine learning (ML), augmented and
virtual reality apps will be hosted at the edge. Telcos already have
thousands of edge sites powering mobile and fixed networks, so they are
uniquely positioned to lead the edge services market. In fact according
to a recent IDC study,
40% of enterprises trust their telco to be their main provider of edge
solutions. However, until now telcos haven't had the tools to do this
themselves without relying on public cloud providers.
HPE
Edge Orchestrator gives the power back to telcos. Now they can offer
value-added edge services in their own right and can move from being
primarily bandwidth providers to offering innovative edge computing
applications, such as AI-powered video analytics, industrial automation
and VR retail services. New revenue from these high-value enterprise
services will also help to cover the significant cost of deploying new
5G infrastructure.
Following the launch of HPE's open 5G portfolio and introduction of the cloud-native HPE 5G Core Stack,
HPE Edge Orchestrator enables telcos to drive new revenue streams at
the edge of telecom networks. HPE Edge Orchestrator unleashes the
deployment and configuration of customer applications, provided as
virtual machines or containers, at geographically-distributed edge
locations owned by telcos, such as existing central offices or on
customer premises. Customers can access edge applications via a
self-service app catalog for simple management, monitoring and the
deployment of an app to an edge device with one-click operation.
"Today,
telcos have significant enterprise business, but they are often seen as
little more than bandwidth providers, competing mostly on price," said
Phil Mottram, Vice President and General Manager of the Communications
and Media Solutions business unit at HPE. "HPE Edge Orchestrator
empowers telcos to move up the value chain and become trusted edge
services providers, offering differentiated, high-value enterprise
services as well as new edge applications for their mobile subscribers.
Furthermore, telcos will be positioned to compete more effectively with
cloud and over-the-top competitors."
HPE
Edge Orchestrator enables enterprises to easily combine their
applications with network services offered by telcos, thus creating an
end-to-end flow across the edge. Today, HPE Edge Orchestrator supports
Multi-access Edge Computing (MEC) with other network-as-a-service (NaaS)
functions being added to the catalog over time. The MEC platform
enables applications to run at the edge, while delivering network
services that ensure a dynamic routing of edge traffic in 4G, 5G and
Wi-Fi environments.
"Telcos
are uniquely positioned to facilitate digital change by connecting
people, enterprises and society, enabling new classes of services,"
explains Martina Kurth, Associate Vice President for IDC's European
Telco Research. "Telcos need to change the way they operate and become
part of the value creation with 5G and edge computing. New technologies
like HPE Edge Orchestrator will help telcos to tap into new digital
business models and play an important role in evolving enterprise
ecosystems."
To
capitalize on the edge services opportunity, telcos need to bring
applications from the cloud out to the edge where the data exists. With
HPE Edge Orchestrator, along with HPE Edgeline and ProLiant servers, telcos can position application intelligence at the edge and unlock major business benefits for their customers:
- Lower latency: When
applications can process requests locally instead of routing them to a
data center, they can deliver much better performance. This translates
to a better user experience for any business application. For the new
generation of ultra-low-latency use cases like augmented reality and
industrial automation, short round-trip times are absolutely essential.
- Bandwidth optimization: Positioning
application intelligence out at the edge, such as doing
number-crunching closer to where the numbers are generated, greatly
reduces the wide-area network (WAN) bandwidth the application requires.
This translates to lower WAN costs for businesses and less traffic
congestion in telco core and metro networks. Applications like video
analytics become much more efficient and, as a result, applicable to use
cases that might not have been viable in the past.
- Improved security and privacy: Any
time businesses transmit data over a network, they're potentially
exposing it to security threats. For the most sensitive information,
some businesses want to keep everything onsite. In regions with strict
privacy protections like the European Union, some applications may
simply not be viable unless they can process all personally identifiable
information (PII) locally.
The
key to making telcos' edge computing deployments successful for both
the operator and their enterprise customers lies in ensuring that
applications running at the edge are easy to deploy and manage across
many sites. With the recently announced Open Distributed Infrastructure Management initiative,
HPE is simplifying the management of physical infrastructure
deployments from core to edge. Now HPE Edge Orchestrator is enabling
telcos to deliver new, targeted vertical solutions and enterprise
applications -all centrally manageable across thousands of distributed
locations through simple self-service tools.
New
edge computing offerings start with compute platforms optimized for
deployment at remote operator sites (central offices, radio towers,
other point of presence (POP) locations), or even directly at the
customer premises. For example, HPE Edgeline Converged Edge Servers,
such as the EL4000 and EL8000, have been specifically designed to run at
the edge. Platforms like these host all of the components needed to
manage the edge computing workloads in containers or VMs. HPE Edge
Orchestrator provides a centralized, comprehensive, hardware agnostic
orchestration platform to provision, configure, and perform general
management functions for all components of edge computing. HPE Edge
Orchestrator is also multi-tenant by design. Telcos can give diverse
enterprise customers their own "private" interfaces to manage their
workloads, sites, edge devices, and services, while their own teams
manage the entire CSP edge computing portfolio as a single system. HPE
Edge Orchestrator can also work in conjunction with the recently
announced Aruba Edge Services Platform (ESP), enabling enterprises to easily integrate both Wi-Fi-based and telco services.
HPE - a trusted and proven partner to telcos
HPE
has over 30 years of experience in the telecoms industry, with more
than 300 telco customers in 160 countries. In the core, 700 million
subscribers across 82 carriers depend on HPE Mobile Core software, and
HPE was recently recognized by Frost & Sullivan with the 2019 Leadership award for Global 5G Infrastructure Enabling Technology. Learn more at: https://www.hpe.com/us/en/solutions/communications-industry-transformation.html
Availability
HPE Edge Orchestrator will be available as a Service to telcos from July 31, 2020.