The company on Monday announced it has embarked on a
programme of work to migrate various systems to Microsoft Azure. It is called
Project Nephos, and its principle aim is to deliver maximum value as early as
possible by identifying the workloads most suited to being redeployed on Azure.
To that end, it is kicking off by transferring the BSS and OSS applications
used by MTN’s opcos in South Africa and Nigeria.
Under the programme, MTN will also migrate EVA, its core big
data platform. In addition to putting it existing workloads on Azure, MTN also
plans to leverage its capabilities in AI and machine learning to come up with
new use cases that, in MTN’s own words, “bridge typical divides across network,
IT and commercial domains.”
MTN and Microsoft have brought in Accenture to provide
technology implementation, integration and support services in hopes of making
the whole thing go smoothly. They have also launched a staff training programme
that covers cloud technologies, devsecops (development, security, and
operations), and data management.
MTN and Microsoft first announced they were working together
in November last year. Their five-year strategic partnership centres on
transforming and modernising MTN’s comms and technology infrastructure, and
building what MTN hopes will be the largest and most valuable platform business
with a clear focus on Africa.
Given MTN’s scale – it serves more than 270 million
subscribers across 19 markets in Africa and the Middle East – it is a pretty
big deal. It has echoes of Dish deploying its greenfield 5G network on Amazon
Web Services (AWS), or AT&T announcing plans to move its 5G network onto
Azure.
In addition to Monday’s OSS/BSS migration, MTN and Microsoft
last week showed off what they claim to be the world’s first proof-of-concept
(PoC) of a 5G standalone (SA) core network deployed on Microsoft Azure.
Every element, including the control plane, user plane and
management nodes was fully deployed on Microsoft’s South Africa Azure Region,
giving MTN a taste of what it can expect from a cloud-native 5G network, i.e.,
rapid deployment and scalability. These two capabilities are particularly
important to MTN, which aims to reach 10-30% population coverage with its 5G
network in the medium term.
“Our strategic partnership with Microsoft will enable us to
transform the way we deliver products and services to our customers. We will
bring the power of cloud computing to life, driving development and innovation
with speed, flexibility and predictable investments and operations.
We remain focused on nurturing the digital skills within MTN and in the societies we operate in, and building digital platforms to drive digital transformation across Africa and the Middle East,” said Nikos Angelopoulos, MTN Group’s CIO, in a statement on Monday.
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