Building the AI Future: Top 5 Infra Trends for 2025

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AI is reshaping the tech infrastructure landscape, demanding a fundamental rethinking of organisational infrastructure strategies. Traditional infrastructure, once sufficient, now struggles to keep pace with the immense scale and complexity of AI workloads. To meet these demands, organisations are turning to high-performance computing (HPC) solutions, leveraging powerful GPUs and specialised accelerators to handle the computationally intensive nature of AI algorithms.

Real-time AI applications, from fraud detection to autonomous vehicles, require lightning-fast processing speeds and low latency. This is driving the adoption of high-speed networks and edge computing, enabling data processing closer to the source and reducing response times. AI-driven automation is also streamlining infrastructure management, automating tasks like network provisioning, security monitoring, and capacity planning. This not only reduces operational overhead but also improves efficiency and frees up valuable resources.

Ecosystm analysts Darian Bird, Peter Carr, Simona Dimovski, and Tim Sheedy present the key trends shaping the tech infrastructure market in 2025.

Click here to download ‘Building the AI Future: Top 5 Infra Trends for 2025’ as a PDF

1. The AI Buildout Will Accelerate; China Will Emerge as a Winner

In 2025, the race for AI dominance will intensify, with Nvidia emerging as the big winner despite an impending AI crash. Many over-invested companies will fold, flooding the market with high-quality gear at bargain prices. Meanwhile, surging demand for AI infrastructure – spanning storage, servers, GPUs, networking, and software like observability, hybrid cloud tools, and cybersecurity – will make it a strong year for the tech infrastructure sector.

Ironically, China’s exclusion from US tech deals has spurred its rise as a global tech giant. Forced to develop its own solutions, China is now exporting its technologies to friendly nations worldwide.

By 2025, Chinese chipmakers are expected to rival international peers, with some reaching parity.

2. AI-Optimised Cloud Platforms Will Dominate Infrastructure Investments

AI-optimised cloud platforms will become the go-to infrastructure for organisations, enabling seamless integration of machine learning capabilities, scalable compute power, and efficient deployment tools.

As regulatory demands grow and AI workloads become more complex, these platforms will provide localised, compliant solutions that meet data privacy laws while delivering superior performance.

This shift will allow businesses to overcome the limitations of traditional infrastructure, democratising access to high-performance AI resources and lowering entry barriers for smaller organisations. AI-optimised cloud platforms will drive operational efficiencies, foster innovation, and help businesses maintain compliance, particularly in highly regulated industries.

3. PaaS Architecture, Not Data Cleanup, Will Define AI Success

By 2025, as AI adoption reaches new heights, organisations will face an urgent need for AI-ready data, spurring significant investments in data infrastructure. However, the approach taken will be pivotal.

A stark divide will arise between businesses fixated on isolated data-cleaning initiatives and those embracing a Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) architecture.

The former will struggle, often unintentionally creating more fragmented systems that increase complexity and cybersecurity risks. While data cleansing is important, focusing exclusively on it without a broader architectural vision leads to diminishing returns. On the other hand, organisations adopting PaaS architectures from the start will gain a distinct advantage through seamless integration, centralised data management, and large-scale automation, all critical for AI.

4. Small Language Models Will Push AI to the Edge

While LLMs have captured most of the headlines, small language models (SLMs) will soon help to drive AI use at the edge. These compact but powerful models are designed to operate efficiently on limited hardware, like AI PCs, wearables, vehicles, and robots. Their small size translates into energy efficiency, making them particularly useful in mobile applications. They also help to mitigate the alarming electricity consumption forecasts that could make widespread AI adoption unsustainable.

Self-contained SMLs can function independently of the cloud, allowing them to perform tasks that require low latency or without Internet access.

Connected machines in factories, warehouses, and other industrial environments will have the benefit of AI without the burden of a continuous link to the cloud.

5. The Impact of AI PCs Will Remain Limited

AI PCs have been a key trend in 2024, with most brands launching AI-enabled laptops. However, enterprise feedback has been tepid as user experiences remain unchanged. Most AI use cases still rely on the public cloud, and applications have yet to be re-architected to fully leverage NPUs. Where optimisation exists, it mainly improves graphics efficiency, not smarter capabilities. Currently, the main benefit is extended battery life, explaining the absence of AI in desktop PCs, which don’t rely on batteries.

The market for AI PCs will grow as organisations and consumers adopt them, creating incentives for developers to re-architect software to leverage NPUs.

This evolution will enable better data access, storage, security, and new user-centric capabilities. However, meaningful AI benefits from these devices are still several years away.

Ecosystm Predicts 2024
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Transformative Integration: HPE’s Acquisition of Juniper Networks

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Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire Juniper Networks for USD 40 per share, totaling an equity value of about USD 14 Billion. This strategic move is aimed to enhance HPE’s portfolio by focusing on higher-growth solutions and reinforcing their high-margin networking business. HPE expects to double their networking business, positioning the combined entity as a leader in networking solutions. With the growing demand for secure, unified technology driven by AI and hybrid cloud trends, HPE aims to offer comprehensive, disruptive solutions that connect, protect, and analyse data from edge to cloud.

This would also be the organisation’s largest deal since becoming an independent company in 2015. The acquisition is expected to be completed by late 2024 or early 2025.

Ecosystm analysts Darian Bird and Richard Wilkins provide their insights on the HPE acquisition and its implications for the tech market.

Converging Networking and Security

One of the big drawcards for HPE is Juniper’s Mist AI. The networking vendors have been racing to catch up – both in capabilities and in marketing. The acquisition though will give HPE a leadership position in network visibility and manageability. With GreenLake and soon Mist AI, HPE will have a solid AIOps story across the entire infrastructure.

HPE has been working steadily towards becoming a player in the converged networking-security space. They integrated Silver Peak well to make a name for themselves in SD-WAN and last year acquiring Axis Security gave them the Zero Trust Network Access (ZTNA), Secure Web Gateway (SWG), and Cloud Access Security Broker (CASB) modules in the Secure Service Edge (SSE) stack. Bringing all of this to the market with Juniper’s networking prowess positions HPE as a formidable player, especially as the Secure Access Service Edge (SASE) market gains momentum.

As the market shifts towards converged SASE, there will only be more interest in the SD-WAN and SSE vendors. In just over one year, Cato Networks and Netskope have raised funds, Check Point acquired Perimeter 81, and Versa Networks has made noises about an IPO. The networking and security players are all figuring out how they can deliver a single-vendor SASE.

Although HPE’s strategic initiatives signal a robust market position, potential challenges arise from the overlap between Aruba and Juniper. However, the distinct focus on the edge and data center, respectively, may help alleviate these concerns. The acquisition also marks HPE’s foray into the telecom space, leveraging its earlier acquisition of Athonet and establishing a significant presence among service providers. This expansion enhances HPE’s overall market influence, posing a challenge to the long-standing dominance of Cisco.

The strategic acquisition of Juniper Networks by HPE can make a transformative leap in AIOps and Software-Defined Networking (SDN). There is a potential for this to establish a new benchmark in IT management.

AI in IT Operations Transformation

The integration of Mist’s AI-driven wireless solutions and HPE’s SDN is a paradigm shift in IT operations management and will help organisations transition from a reactive to a predictive and proactive model. Mist’s predictive analytics, coupled with HPE’s SDN capabilities, empower networks to dynamically adjust to user demands and environmental changes, ensuring optimal performance and user experience. Marvis, Mist’s Virtual Network Assistant (VNA), adds conversational troubleshooting capabilities, enhancing HPE’s network solutions. The integration envisions an IT ecosystem where Juniper’s AI augments HPE’s InfoSight, providing deeper insights into network behaviour, preemptive security measures, and more autonomous IT operations.

Transforming Cloud and Edge Computing

The incorporation of Juniper’s AI into HPE’s cloud and edge computing solutions promises a significant improvement in data processing and management. AI-driven load balancing and resource allocation mechanisms will significantly enhance multi-cloud environment efficiency, ensuring robust and seamless cloud services, particularly vital in IoT applications where real-time data processing is critical. This integration not only optimises cloud operations but also has the potential to align with HPE’s commitment to sustainability, showcasing how AI advancements can contribute to energy conservation.

In summary, HPE’s acquisition of Juniper Networks, and specifically the integration of the Mist AI platform, is a pivotal step towards an AI-driven, efficient, and predictive IT infrastructure. This can redefine the standards in AIOps and SDN, creating a future where IT systems are not only reactive but also intuitively adaptive to the evolving demands of the digital landscape.

Ecosystm-Snapshot

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AT&T & Fortinet Partner for a Managed SASE Solution

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Last week AT&T announced a partnership with Fortinet to expand their managed security services portfolio. This partnership provides global managed Secure Access Service Edge (SASE) solutions at scale. The solution uses Fortinet’s SASE stack which unifies software-defined wide-area network (SD-WAN) and network security capabilities into AT&T managed cybersecurity framework. Additionally, AT&T SASE and Fortinet will integrate with AT&T Alien Labs Threat Intelligence platform, a threat intelligence unit to enhance detection and response. AT&T has plans to update its managed SASE service during the year and will continue to bring more options.

Talking about the AT&T-Fortinet partnership, Ecosystm Principal Advisor, Ashok Kumar says, “This move continues the trend of the convergence of networking and security solutions. AT&T is positioning themselves well with their integrated offer of network and security services to address the needs of global enterprises.”  

Convergence of Network & Security

AT&T’s improved global managed security service includes features such as secure web gateway, firewall-as-a service, cloud access security broker (CASB) and zero-trust access, which provides security teams and analysts with unified capabilities across the cloud, networks and endpoints. The solution aims to enable enterprises to create a more resilient network bringing the core capabilities of the two companies that will reduce operational costs and deliver a unified offering.

Last year AT&T also partnered with Cisco to expand its SD-WAN solution and to support AT&T Managed Services using Cisco’s vManage controller through a single management interface. Over the past years multiple vendors including Fortinet have developed comprehensive SASE solution capabilities through partnerships or acquisitions to provide a unified offering. Last year Fortinet acquired Opaq, a SASE cloud provider to bolster their security capabilities through OPAQ’s patented Zero Trust Network Access (ZTNA) cloud solution and to strengthen SD-WAN, security and edge package.

The Push Towards Flexible Networking

Kumar says, “The pandemic has created a higher demand and value for secure networking services. Enterprises experienced greater number of phishing and malware attacks last year with the sudden increase in work-from-home users. The big question enterprises need to ask themselves is whether legacy networks can support their evolving business priorities.”

“As global economies look to recover, securing remote users working from anywhere, with full mobility, will be a high priority for all enterprises. Enterprises need to evaluate mobile SASE services that provide frictionless identity management with seamless user experiences, and be compatible with the growing adoption of 5G services in 2021 and beyond.”


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