Cloud Computing Trends for 2021

Navveen Balani
3 min readJan 6, 2021

Cloud computing kept the business and remote workforces connected during this ongoing coronavirus pandemic. As we move into 2021, every organization would eventually adopt cloud models and existing cloud businesses would look at ways to streamline their processes for better business continuity.

Let’s look at the top cloud computing trends that organizations need to watch out for.

Hybrid and Multicloud

A hybrid and Multicloud platform provides a cloud computing environment that helps organizations to deploy and manage their applications on on-prem, private cloud, or across multi-cloud providers in a unified and consistent way.

A Multicloud environment provides enterprises to modernize their applications and adopt cloud services from multiple cloud vendors based on their business requirements and avoid vendor lock-in.

Organizations that runs their solutions on-premises, can leverage their existing infrastructure and modernize their applications and build regulatory and compliant solutions where data doesn’t leave the organization’s geographic boundaries. These organizations can scale their on-prem infrastructure to the cloud and also leverage cloud services to run non-sensitive computation tasks.

For instance, Hybrid and Multicloud platforms like Google Anthos provides a unified approach to streamline on-premises and multi-cloud environments that includes

  • A consistent development and deployment experience
  • Unified operations, monitoring, and SLA management
  • Consistent compliance, security, and policy adherence
  • Portability through the use of cloud-native applications/containers

You would see a lot of developments in this space — from infrastructure modernization, integration, tooling, and skilling for hybrid and multi-cloud adoption.

Cloud on the Edge

In a connected world and with 5G gaining momentum, we would see a new class of cloud-native applications that would require data and compute to be located closer to end-users to provide real-time, ultra-low latency, and immersive experience.

The next-generation applications would drive a new set of requirements like near real-time decision making, low latency streaming, gaming and virtual experience, and collective intelligence. With the adoption of the Internet of Things, every object in the world would have the potential to connect to the Internet and provide its data so as to derive actionable insights on its own or through other connected objects. To realize this vision for the Internet of Things, Edge computing would play a very critical role.

Industries need to be agile and prepared for transformation. For instance, virtual mall shopping, trying and buying stuffs can provide the same real-like experience in the future.

Cloud providers would need to extend the hybrid and multi-cloud model on the edge to provides computing and central management of edge clouds.

Serverless

Serverless technology removes the overhead of managing the cloud infrastructure and allow organizations to focus on executing business functions.

A lot of organizations have already embarked on the serverless journey and this would grow exponentially for a new class of applications and for distributed services orchestration. Serverless technology will be a boom for start-ups and small scale business to quickly try out and scale ideas/products without worrying about constant cloud costs.

You might see a lot of standardization evolve in this arena, which allows to run serverless technology is a vendor-neutral way across hybrid and multi-cloud providers.

Intelligent Cloud Management and Cloud Optimization

As all workloads would eventually move to cloud and hybrid cloud models, intelligent cloud management solutions will evolve which would guide customers to use cloud services effectively and optimize their spending.

Based on the usage data generated by the cloud and workloads, recommendations would be provided to downgrade or upscale computing resources. For instance, a database instance might have been provisioned with default IOPS and based on utilization, only 30% of IOPS is actually utilized. The cloud optimization solution would provide a recommendation to downgrade the IOPS numbers by utilizing every bit of usage data to provide optimisation. Similarly, if development environments are not being utilized on weekends and only available for business hours, based on actual usage utilization, recommendations should be provided to turn off those computing resources. Similarly, recommendations can be provided to move towards serverless where constant workload is not required. There can be many opportunities where an AI engine can recommend upgrade/downgrade or even migration of services based on actual usage scenarios.

We would also see a lot of third-party vendor solutions come up that would help customers choose and provision the right cloud services and optimise spends.

Summary

To summarize, various innovations would happen in cloud computing to help organizations modernize existing applications and build new cloud-native solutions that can seamlessly run anywhere — be it on-prem, multi-clouds, or on the edge.

This article was first published at — https://navveenbalani.dev/index.php/articles/cloud-trends-for-2021/

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Navveen Balani
Navveen Balani

Written by Navveen Balani

LinkedIn Top Voice | Google Cloud Fellow | Chair - Standards Working Group @ Green Software Foundation | Driving Sustainable AI Innovation & Specification

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