siliconindia | | April 20156 Editor-in-Chief Harvi Sachar Managing Editor Christo Jacob Editorial Staff Anamika Sahu Dylan D'Souza Mewanshwa Kharshiing Rachita Sharma Sandeep Sen Sagaya Christuraj Sudhakar Singh Vignesh Anantharaj Sr.Visualiser Ashok kumar Circulation Manager Magendran Perumal Mailing AddressSiliconIndia Inc44790 S. Grimmer Blvd Suite 202, Fremont, CA 94538T:510.440.8249, F:510.440.8276 siliconindiaNovember 2013, volume 16-11 (ISSN 1091-9503) Published monthly by siliconindia, Inc. To subscribe to siliconindiaVisit www.siliconindia.com or send email to subscription@siliconindia.com siliconindiaCopyright © 2013 siliconindia, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or part of any text, photography or illustrations without written permission from the publisher is prohibited. The publisher assumes no responsibility for unsolicited manuscripts, photographs or illustrations. Views and opinions expressed in this publication are not necessarily those of the magazine and accordingly, no liability is assumed by the publisher thereof.siliconindia's circulation is audited and certified by BPA International. siliconindia is available through mainstream retail outlets such as Barnes & Noble, Borders, and Tower Records. It is also available at ethnic Asian Indian stores in major Indian hot spots across the U.S. The magazine is also distributed at major trade shows and conferences, including Comdex, Internet World and PC Expo.Visualisers Ranjith C Editor-in-Chief Harvi Sachar Managing Editor Pradeep Shankar Editorial Staff Anitha T.S Arun Kant Durgesh Prakash Shahina Islam Jeevan George Sagaya Christuraj Shashikant P. Anushree Roy Sr.Visualiser Ashok kumar Circulation Manager Magendran Perumal Mailing AddressSiliconIndia Inc44790 S. Grimmer Blvd Suite 202, Fremont, CA 94538T:510.440.8249, F:510.894.8405 siliconindiaApril 2015, volume 18-4 (ISSN 1091-9503)Published monthly by siliconindia, Inc. To subscribe to siliconindiaVisit www.siliconindia.com or send email to subscription@siliconindia.com siliconindiaCopyright © 2015 siliconindia, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or part of any text, photography or illustrations without written permission from the publisher is prohibited. The publisher assumes no responsibility for unsolicited manuscripts, photographs or illustrations. Views and opinions expressed in this publication are not necessarily those of the magazine and accordingly, no liability is assumed by the publisher thereof.siliconindia's circulation is audited and certified by BPA International.Visualiser Arpita GhoshThe cloud era is here to stay as it continues to shift from an alternative to core part of the enterprise strategy. Adoption is occurring, and growth in cloud usage suggests more successes than failures.An increasing number of enterprises are moving towards private, public and hybrid clouds. Many are moving to a relatively sophisticated hybrid cloud approach, and a broadening in the number of workloads running on the cloud bodes well for the future.But adoption is more complicated than it seems. Various surveys show that enterprises running less than one-fifth of their application portfolio on cloud infrastructure. Many enterprises are still on the fence about it--especially when it comes to moving mission-critical applications.A noticeable trend is continued rise of multiple cloud usage, whether public or private. Enterprises are becoming more open to public cloud and more comfortable with cloud security, which indeed is critical to drive cloud adoption forward. In the next year organizations expect to shift more workloads to cloud, with public cloud workloads growing faster than private cloud.As cloud adoption increases and more of the enterprise data resides on cloud, the underlying network infrastructure should also support in order to access the cloud data at higher speeds. Enter Aryaka.In this edition, we feature on the cover Milpitas, CA-based Aryaka, whose innovations are revolutionizing the B2B networking landscape. A forward-thinking organization, Aryaka has identified inefficient, outdated business models and have set out to revolutionize them. In the process, Aryaka has created the potential to become billion-dollar business, setting itself apart as the pioneering innovator of cloud-based WAN services.Founded by Ajit Gupta, Aryaka offers a disruptive solution that takes complicated, hardware-based WAN and application acceleration services, moves them to the cloud, and offers businesses an on-demand, simple-to-deploy as-a-Service alternative.Over the years, Aryaka has taken WAN optimization, application acceleration, and CDN services away from the monopoly incumbents--incumbents who offer products that only other deep-pocketed behemoth enterprises can afford--and transformed those products into cloud-based services, ones that even midmarket enterprises can afford to take advantage of. Built on top of its revolutionary WAN as-a-Service offering, Aryaka is creating new ecosystems for cloud-based networking services. Unseating corporate giants is no easy feat. But already it's hard to think of the world without Aryaka.The groundbreaking shiftEditorialPradeep ShankarManaging Editoreditor@siliconindia.com
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