Akamai’s big cloud push
Hello, and welcome to Protocol Enterprise! Today: Akamai is ready to talk in greater detail about its plans for Linode, experts warn of increased cyberattacks after Russia’s partial mobilization, and the enterprise startups that raised new funding rounds last week.
Doubling down on the cloud
Akamai is unveiling some of its postacquisition expansion plans for Linode six months after completing the $900 million deal for the IaaS cloud provider.
When it announced the acquisition in February, Akamai said it wanted to combine its delivery, distributed edge, and security services with Linode’s developer-friendly cloud capabilities and cater to more enterprises seeking an alternative to AWS, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud Platform.
- First up are plans to double Linode’s global infrastructure footprint by expanding its full product suite into more than a dozen additional data centers across North America, the Asia-Pacific region, and Latin America by the end of 2023, Shawn Michels, Akamai’s vice president of product management for computing, told Protocol Enterprise.
- The first new site is expected to come online later this year in Ashburn, Virginia. Akamai also is targeting Amsterdam, Chennai, Chicago, Delhi, Jakarta, Los Angeles, Miami, Osaka, Paris, Rome, São Paulo, Seattle, and Stockholm.
- “They are actually new [compute] build-outs, but we are looking to deploy in existing Akamai data centers where possible or at least use locations that Akamai is already familiar with,” Michels said. “We’re really looking at locations where we can find the kind of network capacity, the colo, and the power that allow us to expand horizontally like you would expect from a hyperscaler.”
Akamai is evaluating 50 locations to introduce “distributed sites” — which are not too dissimilar from AWS Local Zones — to bring basic compute capabilities into hard-to-reach locations underserved by the major cloud providers, such as parts of Southeast Asia, Africa, and the Middle East.
- While there’s a need for very large core sites that offer access to Linode’s full set of features, customers are also looking for access to a lighter-weight variant of compute in those difficult-to-reach regions, according to Michels.
- “The goal is to try to push data and try to push parts of the application as close to the user as possible,” he said.
- “In a core site … you would have things like database as a service and object storage and block storage and VMs and containers and GPUs,” Michels said.
- But “what we’re hearing from some of our customers is that in order to serve their audience as they build more distributed applications, and as they move into things like microservices, what they would like is VMs and a block storage offering in a more difficult-to-reach region, where maybe the networking or maybe the data center infrastructure isn’t as robust as it is in other regions,” he said
Also look to Akamai to aggressively roll out new enterprise cloud capabilities for Linode.
- “Linode has taken an approach of really focusing on targeted IaaS-related services — so compute, networking, and storage — with a fundamental approach of being very lightweight and only doing certain layers of PaaS as needed,” Michels said.
- “Our goal is not to compete with the hyperscalers on a like-for-like [basis] for all of the platform-as-a-service-related capabilities that they bring to the market,” he said. “Rather, our intention is to provide the platform-as-a-service-related capabilities that reduce friction for our customers to adopt our infrastructures-as-a-service capabilities — so things like database as a service.”
- “Where we don’t have the same PaaS depth as the hyperscalers, we rely on a vibrant ecosystem of third-party partners and solutions who can fill those gaps,” Michels said.
A MESSAGE FROM WEST MONROE

Digital is an ongoing process, not a destination. West Monroe knows that becoming a digital organization requires a mindset shift that will impact processes and employees at all levels, and that success can be achieved if the organization is aligned toward a clear vision.
The state of innovation
The global innovation race is well underway. What is the U.S. administration doing to stay ahead, and where is it falling short? What is the status of funding by Congress and in statehouses, and which areas still need investment? Is the U.S. doing enough to attract and retain top tech talent from around the world?
Join Protocol Policy’s Hirsh Chitkara for a virtual event on Sept. 27 at 10 a.m. PT as we dive into the U.S.’s national strategy on innovation, what’s working, what isn’t, and what policy changes we can expect from the year ahead. He’ll be speaking with Chris Miller, author of “Chip War: The Fight for the World’s Most Critical Technology”; Robert Atkinson, president, Information Technology and Innovation Foundation; and Jim Green, head of government affairs, Okta.
Financial corner
DataGuardraised $61 million to provide data protection as a service.
Knoeticraised $36 million to help enterprises unify their HR data.
Around the enterprise
Ukraine’s government warned that its close allies, “primarily Poland and the Baltic state,” are at heightened risk of DDoS attacks on critical infrastructure by Russia following the partial mobilization of its citizens.
Bessemer’s Janelle Teng collected several interesting details from the last round of earnings results among cloud companies, and despite broader economic concerns the sector remains pretty strong.A MESSAGE FROM WEST MONROE

Digital is an ongoing process, not a destination. West Monroe knows that becoming a digital organization requires a mindset shift that will impact processes and employees at all levels, and that success can be achieved if the organization is aligned toward a clear vision.
Thanks for reading — see you tomorrow!
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