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Most companies have scaled cloud infrastructure and AI initiatives. But many organizations are now reevaluating another important layer of modern operations: connectivity resilience. As connected systems become more distributed, resilient network infrastructure is becoming increasingly important for operational visibility and workflow coordination. I explored this at the @TMobileBusiness SuperBroadband launch. A thread. T-Mobile for Business Partner
The next board-level AI question cannot only be: “What use cases are we funding?” It also has to be: “Is our infrastructure prepared to support those systems across demanding environments?” As businesses continue scaling AI and automation, resilient connectivity is becoming increasingly important for operational visibility and connected workflows. I wrote the full piece on why connectivity resilience is becoming a bigger part of AI infrastructure strategy, and how organizations are approaching resilient connectivity across distributed environments. Read it here: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/you-scaled-cloud-ai-did-protect-network-ronald-van-loon-bpiae How are you thinking about connectivity resilience as AI operations continue to scale? T-Mobile for Business Partner #SuperBroadband
Let me challenge a belief most IT leaders hold. “We have a backup ISP. We’re protected.” But businesses are realizing connectivity resilience can become more complicated across distributed environments. If multiple connections rely on similar infrastructure dependencies, disruptions can still impact connected operations and workflows. That’s why more organizations are reevaluating how they approach resilient connectivity infrastructure.
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