DataCenterNews Asia Pacific - Specialist news for cloud & data center decision-makers
Story image
2018 forecast to be the year of hardware and mainframe modernisation
Fri, 15th Dec 2017
FYI, this story is more than a year old

The advance of artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning and the Internet of Things (IoT) in 2018 will expose the importance of mainframe modernisation.

That's in the opinion TmaxSoft CEO, Carl Davies, who asserts these new technologies are putting a premium on businesses' ability to deploy new services rapidly and work quickly with data and consequently making mainframe modernisation a key issue.

According to Davies, legacy mainframes can stall organisations' embrace of these new technologies, rendering them less competitive in the digital age.

"Business models are even less stable than they used to be, as digital technologies continue to shake the very foundations on which they stand. This makes the capacity to reinvent yourself as an organisation and react flexible to changing market conditions a key skill not just to compete, but simply to survive,” Davies says.

“The problem with legacy mainframes is that they often make it very difficult for businesses to seamlessly explore the new technologies that they need to work with in order to adapt to these shifting sands."

And statistics from Gartner support Davies' claims, with AI and IoT set to transform entire markets within the next few years. Early adopter brands that redesign their websites to support visual- and voice-search will increase their eCommerce revenue by 30 per cent by 2021. By 2020, it predicts that IoT will feature in 95 per cent of electronics for new product designs.

"Legacy technologies that have been around for decades often slow the pace of time-to-market, inhibiting innovation by making the process of launching new services and responding to competitors a time-consuming, lengthy ordeal. With the legacy mainframe, not only do companies incur high maintenance costs, they also have restricted access to best-in-class software,” says Davies.

“There are other severe limitations facing the traditional mainframe – including being locked into a single provider, as well as being exposed to the risk of an ever-contracting pool of people with the skills and experience to work with this legacy technology.

Davies says this year has seen a lot of excitement build around AI and IoT, and undoubtedly these technologies are poised to transform entire industries over the next few years.

“The internet and mobile took many by surprise, 'Blockbuster-ing' previous titans and rendering many businesses irrelevant. A key lesson was that as new challengers emerge who are ideally suited to new conditions, incumbents need to have the infrastructure in place to move fast and therefore compete with them,” Davies says.

“The legacy mainframe often weighs down organisations with an outdated approach to IT, and so modernisation is the first step to getting fit for the dynamism of the modern business landscape.