Tech giants in push to deploy their cloud offerings overseas
By He Wei in Shanghai | China Daily | Updated: 2017-07-27 08:16
The logo of Tencent Cloud is pictured at an exhibition in Fuzhou, Fujian province, June 18, 2016. [Photo/VCG] |
Chinese tech giants are busy deploying their cloud offerings overseas-paving the way for the growing number of local companies expanding aggressively abroad and their projected demand for data storage and processing.
Among the latest round of developments was the opening last week of a European data center in Frankfurt by Tencent Cloud, the cloud computing arm of internet conglomerate Tencent Holdings Ltd.
The new center is the first of its kind on the continent for Tencent, a region more Chinese businesses are increasingly making forays into.
As Tencent's local partner in Frankfurt, cloud service provider Interxion will serve the rising demand for the Tencent's cloud services, particularly from online games, online finance, video streaming, and other internet-related industries.
In the wake of the opening of Tencent's Silicon Valley data center in April, the new facility is expected to boost the group's cloud global availability zones to 34 in total. These span Singapore, Australia, Europe, the United States and the Chinese mainland.
Gartner Inc Research Director Kevin Ji said that for service providers, cloud computing was essentially about the economies of scale. The expanding deployment of their offers would lower costs further and push forward global infrastructure deliveries, Ji added.
Datacenters-or supporting data nodes-were essential to enable the global expansion of Chinese companies, which had already become a major driving force in the global economy, said Charlie Dai, principal analyst at consultancy Forrester.
"Choosing the same vendor will help simplify the architecture and management complexity and ensure consistent user experience," Dai added.
Gartner's Ji said adopting a cloud service provider required prudence, because it would be costly to change vendors once infrastructures and codes were set.
"That explains why Chinese companies, which are already using Chinese cloud services, tend to extend the service overseas," he said.
Chinese cloud services, meanwhile, will also help international companies tap the vast and opportunity-rich Chinese market, analysts said.
They added that explained why Alibaba Cloud, backed by Alibaba Group Holding Ltd, decided to set up a new digital hub in Malaysia-enabling small businesses to achieve scale through a series of cloud-related technology, architects and consulting services.
Only a handful of Chinese players, including Alibaba, Tencent and Huawei Technologies Co Ltd, have appeared as emerging forces in a cloud market currently dominated by Western peers led by Amazon.com Inc and Microsoft Corp.
But some of them have started to climb global rankings of their sector. A Gartner report in June highlighted Alibaba's high potential, ranking it at No 4 ahead of IBM Corp and Oracle Systems Corp, among others.
"Currently, however, Chinese companies lack genuine technological breakthroughs and innovation. They still have very little in the way of unique differentiation compared with other providers," Ji said.