Deutsche Telekom Launches Global Network
Offering for Enterprises
- New software-defined network (SDN) now available
- Rapid and secure connection for multinational business customers
- Worldwide alliance “ngena” delivers international reach
Effective immediately, Deutsche Telekom is
offering its corporate customers rapidly deployable network connections
and services. The new telecommunications offering is based on the ngena
network – the Next Generation Enterprise Network Alliance
(www.ngena.net). Through the global alliance, which Deutsche Telekom set
up together with partners, a hitherto internationally unrivaled
business model was set up in the industry. All ngena partners share
their networks and connect them to a global, highly standardized
network.
The network is based on the state-of-the-art technology
and is managed by software. As such, multinational corporate customers
in particular can roll out corporate networks and data connections as
virtual private networks (VPN)
much faster than before. The advantage is obvious: International
enterprise customers benefit from networks that can be set up quickly
either via the Internet or via dedicated lines. Deutsche Telekom
customers can thus respond quicker to new business conditions in the
wake of digitization.
Patrick Molck-Ude, who is responsible for
network business for Deutsche Telekom’s corporate customers, says: “With
our global network offering we are striking a chord with multinational
customers. Network services that are quickly deployable, more secure,
more powerful and global are the engine for the industrial production of
the future and a growth area for Deutsche Telekom. The global market
for network access and transport services for corporate networks is
already worth 50 billion U.S. dollars and is increasing by 3.5 percent
annually.”
DT first member with network offering “powered by ngena”
Deutsche Telekom subsidiary, T-Systems,
is the first alliance partner to launch a network offering based on the
ngena platform. Dubbed “Smart SD-WAN powered by ngena,” it is available
in the access variants XS, S or M – depending on whether the network
access is configured singly or redundantly, and whether it is provided
via the Internet, Ethernet, or a combination of the two. With the standardized and automated “Smart SD-WAN” offering, T-Systems is supplementing its existing classic IP VPN offering IntraSelect, which can be tailored to specific customer requirements.
The new network product also supports other services in addition to secure worldwide networking of company sites as VPN.
These include the secure regional gateway from the corporate networks
to the Internet using firewalls, or the intelligent management of
network traffic depending on priority class. The offering is initially
geared to enterprises with German procurement (Germany outbound). Sales
in other countries will gradually follow, along with additional access
variants and services as well as a broader coverage of countries.
ngena network already covers wide parts of the globe
Smart
SD WAN is based on the partner model from ngena, the Next Generation
Enterprise Network Alliance (www.ngena.net) which Deutsche Telekom
together with co-founders CenturyLink, Reliance Jio, and SK Telekom set
up at the beginning of 2016. Numerous other telecommunications providers
who link their own networks via a central platform to form a global
infrastructure have since joined the alliance. These include Altice with
SFR and Portugal Telecom, Neutrona, PCCW Global as well as technology
partners Cisco, Comarch and Equinix. Other partners are set to join
soon.
ngena Managing Director Marcus Hacke says: “The launch of
the Deutsche Telekom offering is an important milestone for our young
company. We are ensuring that ngena is connecting up more and more
telecommunications providers worldwide. To do so we are expanding our
own network along with the access nodes worldwide. The first network
nodes in Germany, the United States, China and South Korea are already
active. By the end of the year there should be around ten, providing us
with more comprehensive coverage of the regions of North and South
America, Europe and Asia.”
New network generation makes it easier to control machinery worldwide
Deutsche
Telekom also aims to make it easier for enterprises to manage
industrial plant and equipment right around the globe by using a new
generation of networks. Machinery and robots are already intelligently
networked at companies. Procurement and logistics, sales and service –
companies' entire value chains are digital. At Industry 4.0 companies,
manufacturing and logistics organize themselves in smart factories,
without human control. German industry plans to invest 40 billion euros
in Industry 4.0 by 2020, according to a study by consulting firm
PricewaterhouseCoopers.
Background: software-defined networks and Industry 4.0
In
the Industry 4.0 world, machines, individual parts and other objects
are equipped with sensors. These collect data which can be used to
manage the product’s path through the production machinery and the
individual work steps. At the same time, more transmitting sensors also
means more data traffic, greater real-time requirements (latency) and
increased bandwidth demands. This is in addition to potentially
connected ERP (Enterprise Resource Planning) systems with thousands of
users, big data analytics and cloud services that access the network.
The
providers' historically evolved networks are already having trouble
keeping pace with these new requirements. One reason is that network
resources are still being allocated manually in some cases. This is slow
and expensive – it can take days, weeks or even months before a
reliable line is available for mission-critical use. No administrator
will be able to keep up with future data flows. Software-defined
networks (SDN) automate the configuration of individual systems by
shifting the administration work to a central management console. This
makes SDNs the foundation for a new generation of industrial production
networks such as ngena's. The same applies to the development of
industrial networks based on the upcoming
5G standard, which is only just beginning.
Source: Deutsche Telekom media announcement