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What’s next on the horizon for telecommunications service providers? A look at 2024 with Red Hat.

In 2023, Red Hat met with so many customers and partners – from industry event interactions and individual meeting rooms to cross country visits and late-night service calls, we’ve learned so much from our trusted ecosystem. With all of these lasting connections made, along with so many new projects launched, we can’t wait to see what this year will bring. As we look ahead to the rest of 2024 and gather together again soon at MWC Barcelona, I wanted to take some time to reflect on what we’ve learned to set our customers and partners up for success in 2024.What’s top of mind for servi

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In 2023, Red Hat met with so many customers and partners – from industry event interactions and individual meeting rooms to cross country visits and late-night service calls, we’ve learned so much from our trusted ecosystem. With all of these lasting connections made, along with so many new projects launched, we can’t wait to see what this year will bring. As we look ahead to the rest of 2024 and gather together again soon at MWC Barcelona, I wanted to take some time to reflect on what we’ve learned to set our customers and partners up for success in 2024.

What’s top of mind for service providers? What should the whole telecommunications industry be prepared for? How will Red Hat help? What will the broad ecosystem need to do to make visions a reality? While it’s impossible to provide a complete answer to all of these questions – the telecommunications industry is vibrant and ever changing – there are numerous compelling projects underway that I think are worth exploring.

AI still leads the conversation
As we step into 2024, the adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) is poised to reach new heights, transforming industries and reshaping business landscapes. The distributed nature of telecommunications networks, along with data gravity and data sovereignty, creates an opening for AI to help navigate complexity and automate network lifecycles more efficiently. Now, service providers will be able to leverage AI models within networks. For example, think about radio access networks (RAN) – service providers can leverage AI models in the RAN and core for a more dynamic control of frequencies, sectors, cells and base stations to go beyond just time-of-day presets. AI will also help to simplify and streamline operations with real-time root cause analysis for reduced mean time to repair.

Additionally, blurred boundaries between network cloud, core, edge and IT are driving service providers to embrace a holistic approach that unifies management practices and leverages shared technologies. These include AI, ML, AIOps and generative AI.

Predictive and generative AI are expected to play a big role in increasing developer productivity. It’s still too early to determine just how AI will work in this context and what organizations will need to do to support security, privacy and compliance requirements, but we see a future where there is an AI code assistant sitting beside developers through every stage of the development cycle.

Service providers will be paying extra attention to systems security and risk management
Service providers’ disaggregated networks and IT transformation create well-defined layers using cloud native design principles. This is an opportunity to think holistically about a defense in depth, or security at every layer, that starts within the hardware, extends up through the platform software and protects applications right where they expose an interface which extends the attack surface. This balances an increased focus on security while maintaining agility and enables simplification of the diverse and sometimes overlapping security tools by bringing security natively into each layer. Cybersecurity and resilience extends beyond reactive protection to proactive protection that includes supply chain and automation for preparedness, response and recovery when incidents occur. While the fundamentals remain unchanged, the new architectures, business models, and operational paradigms enable this comprehensive and proactive approach to systems security and risk management.

Striving to balance market momentum and risk, service providers will look to SaaS and on-demand offerings from hyperscalers and software vendors to accelerate innovation before deployment of these capabilities at scale. Service providers have negotiated large committed spend agreements with multiple cloud providers, primarily for digital business applications. They are also considering these providers for modernized operation and business support systems (OSS/BSS) as well as specific network use cases with additional caution, given service providers’ requirements for operational efficiency, security, span of control and economics at scale. One way to address these requirements is with a hybrid cloud application platform (such as Red Hat OpenShift) to provide consistency across any cloud. Many service providers will attempt to build the elasticity and scale of public cloud capabilities into their own environments and may also choose to build specific MEC and edge offerings through various partner arrangements to pursue geographic and industrial solution opportunities.

Sustainability is still top of mind
Sustainability has gained tremendous mindshare across the world, driven by regulatory pressures, stakeholder expectations, and the pressing need to mitigate escalating energy costs. The telecommunications industry’s present share of 2% to 3% in global power consumption and data centers utilizing approximately 2% of the world’s energy underscore its significance. Service providers allocate a substantial 20% to 40% of operating costs towards energy expenses. The convergence of rising traffic demands, increased energy prices, and ambitious sustainability targets presents a formidable challenge. In the era of cloud computing, sustainability permeates various facets, influencing system architecture from chip design to application development and radio access networks. This commitment to sustainability extends deep into the supply chain, compelling service providers to exert pressure on vendors to consider carbon footprints, particularly in relation to network infrastructure hardware and software.

In order to increase their reliability at scale while improving their net carbon footprint, service providers will look to meter and automate the measurement and control of their power consumption and cooling using innovative hardware, software and AI models – especially in the RAN but also in their core, datacenter and hybrid cloud deployments.

Growing revenue and reducing operational costs remain critical concerns
Service providers are facing significant capex and opex challenges as they continue to invest to remain competitive on:

  • Modernizing legacy IT and network capabilities
  • Expanded fiber reach
  • 5G core networks for new service offerings
  • Expanding RAN footprints for better performance

With these initiatives and challenges in mind, the focus for service providers will be to embrace intelligent automation and AI technologies. The end goal is to improve overall business and operational efficiency across network, security, infrastructure and applications in a hybrid/multi-cloud environment.

Reducing operational expenditure has been on top of service provider IT lists for many years and will remain there. This is fueled by increasing interest rates, which make it very expensive for service providers to secure capital for new projects as well as serve existing obligations with existing network equipment. The imperative to cut costs is viewed as vital for unlocking funds to support new investments. Ongoing market uncertainties, influenced by potential recessions and geopolitical tensions, are shaping a risk-sensitive environment. This requires strategic enhancement of efficiencies and productivity through software innovation, particularly for those on their path of digital transformation.

There will be greater collaboration between manufacturers and service providers with the rise of private 5G networks and edge computing
This year at Red Hat’s Open5G event, we talked with Yesmean Luk, private networks practice lead at STL Partners, about enterprise edge and private networks opportunities. She said, “private networks and edge computing are two inextricably linked technologies that are poised to improve the performance of applications and enable huge amounts of data to be processed in real time.”

Service providers are perfectly positioned to help manufacturers handle the massive increase in the volume of machine generated data. This can lead to faster decision making, more secure and reliable connectivity, analytics, AI-enabled applications/services and more. Video cameras, robotics, conveyor belts and a host of other remote devices can all connect through private 5G wireless networks and each device has an edge application with an embedded AI/ML model that helps in inferencing and making quick decisions.

Red Hat is already working with customers and our ecosystem partners to help implement these private 5G networks to realize greater cost reduction, preventative maintenance in real time, energy self-sufficiency, operational efficiency, more flexibility and faster time-to-market.

Demand for cloud flexibility will grow
Following a period of rapid cloud migrations to achieve improved economics, a reality check has set in. Service providers have gained a nuanced understanding of the actual costs associated with operating across multiple clouds. This awareness, coupled with new regulatory requirements and evolving business strategies, prompts a reevaluation of cloud strategies. While there is no wholesale shift away from public cloud adoption (due to economic advantages), a nuanced continuation is anticipated. The spotlight is on workload flexibility to mitigate fragmentation and align with changing regulatory, financial, operational, and business key performance indicators (KPIs).

2024: Build for intelligence, build for the edge, build for now
For 2024, the service provider landscape promises to be a dynamic one, marked by significant opportunities. At Red Hat, we eagerly anticipate navigating this terrain alongside our valued customers, helping to address rising costs, an evolving gallery of cybersecurity threats, and a boom in IT innovation.

Service providers modernizing networks and IT with Red Hat technology have seen their businesses flourish, while keeping costs under control, like being able to launch new applications 50% faster and reduce AI development and operations costs by 70%

Red Hat’s portfolio delivers built-in security capabilities and extensive automation, while our trusted software supply chain practices help to reduce the risk in the underlying application and cloud platforms. Holistically, this serves to strengthen the overall security posture of service provider deployments without removing the ability to innovate.

Red Hat and its extensive partner ecosystem help service providers take control of their expanding public, private and hybrid-multi cloud resources, gaining more visibility, and operational flexibility to implement innovation strategies that work best for them. Red Hat platforms make AI easier to develop and deploy from edge to core to hybrid cloud. And to help service providers operate in a more energy efficient way, Red Hat is working with the open source community, partners and customers to define and build a sustainable architecture in a cloud-native environment.

We are looking forward to speaking with you about your projects soon so come join us at MWC Barcelona 2024.

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