
"Digitalization of the economy without sufficient network infrastructure is like a railway without tracks," says Andreas Rüsseler, Chief Marketing Officer for cabling specialist R&M AG, in his market outlook. R&M, the globally active Swiss developer and provider of cabling systems for high-end network infrastructures based in Wetzikon, expects to see an increase in the demand for integrated solutions for network infrastructures in 2017. "Cabling with copper and fiber-optic systems is still required as the physical foundation for digitalization – in the same way that tracks are required for transportation by rail. But these days it is more than just a question of cabling," says R&M CMO Andreas Rüsseler. The building and network infrastructures themselves have to be digitized.
"First of all, the basis of a network needs to have the right dimensions and level of reliability in order to cope with the wide-ranging applications of the future," says Andreas Rüsseler. He adds that, given the high expectations for the age of the digitized economy, it is easy to forget that network installations are just as necessary as apps, computers, data centers, and the billions of things that are connected to the internet – the Internet of Things. Rüsseler even believes that the trend toward digitalization is even making the economy fully dependent on tight-knit, fast, interruption-free network infrastructures. A market study conducted by the IT consultancy company Capgemini confirms this trend, revealing that digitalization is the topic currently at the top of the agenda of more than half of all CIOs. And it looks set to stay there in the foreseeable future.
R&M is now increasingly recommending that planners, investors and network operators include the physical level of a network, i.e. the cabling, in the digitalization process from the outset. By this, R&M proposes that a full virtual profile should be stored for each network. The type, function and status of every connector and cable should be recorded digitally and managed centrally, with control being fully automated via a web application. According to R&M, if this is not the case, it will become impossible to manage the increasing volume of network information and the increasing number of network connections brought about by the ubiquitous Internet of Things, cloud services, and the growing demand for bandwidth.
R&M's main market – the structured cabling market – alone is growing by about 3 per cent every year. Hardware manufacturer Cisco estimates that 50 billion sensors will be connected to the Internet of Things by 2020, while chip manufacturer Intel predicts that, by 2030, some 200 billion items, appliances, devices, machines, and buildings will have an internet connection. "Someone is going to have to manage all of these connections and devices," says Andreas Rüsseler. On this basis, R&M is expecting to see a growing demand for integrated network solutions based on comprehensive planning that include the technology and software for digitalization, monitoring, and management, as well as cabling systems.
R&M already has an appropriate solution in the form of R&Minteliphy. This network monitoring system monitors cabling across all distances and in all magnitudes, and also enables three-dimensional digital representation of the data center infrastructure. R&M is building up the expertise needed to be able to manage and support IT processes relating to infrastructure. The company is also working on further developments, with the aim of making the management of data networks more user-friendly.
With reference to market statistics, R&M points out that operational errors and other such faults at the passive network infrastructure level are behind more than half of all data center failures. The company believes that this problem alone is reason enough for real-time monitoring of cabling to be introduced. Causes of damages, delays, signal losses, and high consumption data can be identified quickly online by referring to the digital profile of a process or infrastructure.
Digital information about the infrastructure becomes a key factor in success, proving essential to long-term value creation, strategic decision-making, and agile reactions to changes on the market, according to R&M. AIM facilitates universal planning, while also simplifying organization and business processes. Information on how to create digital profiles for network infrastructures is available in issue 51 of R&M's specialist magazine "Connections".
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