Perspectives

The Era of Modern Compute

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The Era of Modern Compute

Are we all missing a trick?

Many IT projects that began more than five years ago have now racked up huge technical debt, with large costs to remediate them. The change projects of yesteryear are now up for renewal and the technical debt costs keep growing.

Meanwhile, individual business units have greater autonomy to make IT decisions that support their goals. The prevalence of cloud has enabled them to move forward with the new – but they have forgotten how to turn off the old. A drawback of empowering business units is that they can go on to create several different standards, which makes it difficult to monitor and keep everything safe under GDPR.

At the same time, the IT industry has a wealth of trends and imperatives around cloud, artificial intelligence, platforms, DevSecOps and other innovations.

 

Where has this left us as an IT industry?

My observation is that we have had to focus on micro-value such as lift and shift to cloud or things like creating chatbots or building new channels. All great things, but have they forced us back into a siloed approach to value?

 

So what is the trick we are missing?

There are so many advances in how we do IT that we need to call it something new: Modern Compute perhaps. What does this mean? Well, if you look at the diagram below, we have moved from modular systems through declarative to what could now be called operational systems. Ones that have been hardened before any application has been built.

When I used to build systems in the modular phase I had to build everything from scratch: the “DevOps”, although we didn’t call it that, the automation, the availability scripts, and so on. Now so much of this is hardened into the open community solutions that have been built.

When used correctly, I believe this moves us from an era where the IT couldn’t keep up with the business to an era where the business is going to struggle to keep pace.

When these technologies are harnessed together it is possible to build a strong base of assets, with far better controls than we had in the past. This enables us to continue to grow and do more.

So when you focus on the way we work, modern compute, rather than just executing the next thing then you can build something that continues to grow and enables you to drive much higher levels of value that focuses not just on cost, but also speed, quality, risk and business priority.

The good news is that most of us are already using this modern compute today. But many are just constraining the scope of the value they get from it by not using it at scale, or just looking at smaller problems like lift and shift.

So modern compute is the trick we are missing. There are big rewards to be gained from exploring ways we can exploit it and how we can look at the value statement from a different angle. Check out this paper if you’d like to understand more about how we think this can be done.

 

Chief Technology Officer, GBS, UK&I

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