Without satellite, cloud service is just a
concept
Without satellite, cloud service is just a theory. That is the
view of Dr Dawie de Wet, CEO of Q-KON, who says that cloud
services are entirely dependent on reliable networks and none of
the current available options - including ADSL, 3G or satellite
on its own - offer the level of reliability required to
accommodate critical business networks on the cloud.
“In
order to offer the high reliability that will make businesses
move to cloud services confidently, the solution is to bundle
satellite as a redundancy link with ADSL or 3G,” says de Wet.
“Contrary to popular belief, this can be done within a flexible
pricing model that is affordable because it leverages the level
of flexibility inherent to satellite technologies.”
Q-KON
is a Tier 1 provider of integrated
access services and turn-key telecommunications solutions
in Africa and has the resources, experience and knowledge of the
market to develop and operate services that unlock the inherent
flexibility of satellite technology.
The
Company refers specifically to the fact that satellite
technology offers flexibility on a number of levels, including
pricing, service and network – all of which make a critical
difference to successful integration and application.
De
Wet says that the market is aware of the option to add satellite
to ADSL or 3G and to create high reliability bonded services…
but, because of the rigid pricing models currently deployed in
the industry, such services are too expensive for wide scale
deployments.
However, using the fundamental advantages of satellite, and
integrating this with advanced technical management systems,
very effective and flexible pricing models can be offered.
These
billing models typically offer services on a “per network”, or
“per usage” or “per incident” basis and not necessarily on a
fixed per-link within a long-term contract basis.
“So
we say rollout an ADSL, place a VSAT as a backup and do the
costing and contracting in a flexible, creative way so you don’t
pay for two links… and you can have ADSL plus satellite, your
money works and you have a reliable network so you can go
cloud,” says de Wet.
In
terms of service, the market has an opportunity to scale the
technology to suit business requirements.
The
appeal of the infrastructure in meeting business requirements,
particularly in Africa, is that it provides credible solution
factors that often interfere with alternative or traditional
communication infrastructure.
Being
positioned at the forefront of satellite infrastructure adoption
and integration into Africa, Q-KON has witnessed an increase in
interest in this technology to support operations across a
diverse range of industries and sectors.
“In
developing economies, the ability to ensure high capacity,
high-availability services is critical. It is here where
satellite continues to make a difference, along with other key
areas including standby services for enterprise networks,
communication on the move for transport and mobile and also
rapid deployments,” de Wet continues.
However, the advice from Q-KON to the market is straightforward:
satellite applied as a flexible, multi-purpose and reliable
infrastructure represents the ideal solution.
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