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Cloud-managed networking What is cloud-managed networking?
Cloud-managed networking is an architectural approach to network management and systems whereby management and control services are hosted in a public cloud environment.
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- Cloud-managed networking explained
- Why cloud-managed networking?
- How is cloud-managed networking driving innovation?
- What is the difference between cloud-managed networking, cloud networking, and cloud-based networking?
Cloud-managed networking explained
Cloud-managed, or cloud-enabled, networking leverages a unified monitoring, reporting, troubleshooting system hosted in the cloud to deliver the scale needed to operate today’s increasingly complex and distributed network workloads. New compute-intensive services across a range of critical areas like AIOps and ZTNA can be unlocked sustainably with minimal onsite disruption.
- Today's highly mobile users and applications are creating new benchmarks for performance, security, scale, and connectivity from anywhere.
- Cloud-managed networking provides multiple IT benefits, from unified lifecycle management, to more efficient workflows and scale. It's ideal for everyday enterprises, remote and branch offices, schools, public venues and more.
- Cloud-managed network services and infrastructure can include a mix of on-premises access points, switches, and certain device-specific software features as well as cloud-based virtual gateways or group-level software features.
Benefits of cloud-managed networking
The following table compares the benefits of on-premises and cloud-managed networking.
Benefits | On-premises | Cloud-based |
---|---|---|
Scale | Relies on hardware purchases, rack space, cooling, power, etc. | Only requires licensing for on-premises APs, switches, and gateways for cloud management. |
Microservices flexibility | Legacy software principles are common. You must download updates and fixes and adhere to fixed release cycles. | Software is updated when needed, and features are added without affecting other services or release cycles. |
Data lake usability | Constrained by the size of your network and storage within deployed appliances. | Volume and variety of data scales to your vendor’s install base. |
AIOps and troubleshooting | Limited due to size of usable data. | Troubleshooting insights are available for Wi-Fi, wired, WAN, security, and end-user experience. Models are continuously updated based on new and relevant data. Issues are resolved more quickly. |
AIOps and optimization | Limited due to size of one customer’s data lake and the variety of usable information. | Leverages data across customer’s site and similar (anonymous) sites to highlight where specific sites are under-performing. Proactive approach avoids issues. |
Security | Requires outside access, firewall rules, access per admin role, maintaining software, etc. | Requires outside access, but cloud providers and infrastructure vendors maintain strict security practices. Software patches are implemented as needed. Data lake can support new services such as client profiling, behavior analytics, and more. |
IT resources and skills | Maintenance and training are a constant point of contention. | IT can focus on delivering new services. |