From Bruce Kelley and Darren Anstee, NETSCOUT | MWC Barcelona 2024 · · SiliconANGLE theCUBE
“The telcos are going to have to go back to the five9s with 5G slicing. The enterprise is going to want guarantees. They're not going to just sign up for 5G and say, 'Well I hope it works.' They're going to hold them to a certain latency, a certain throughput that's promised, the service they're signing up for, and they're going to want to guarantee it all the time. It's not humans on a phone, where you drop a call and you go, 'Oh, I'll just recall.' These are banks, these are hospitals. It could be life or death, it could be loss of revenue, it could be brand reputation.”
On , Bruce Kelley, Senior Vice President & Chief Technology Officer at NETSCOUT SYSTEMS INC, spoke about 5G slicing during Bruce Kelley and Darren Anstee, NETSCOUT | MWC Barcelona 2024 on SiliconANGLE theCUBE.
Bruce Kelley, Senior Vice President and Chief Technology Officer at Netscout, discussed the company's role in network observability and security during an interview at MWC Barcelona 2024. He described Netscout as a "smart data company" that provides high-definition visibility into subscriber activity on the largest networks globally, including 90% of tier-one carriers. Kelley noted that as 5G moves into the cloud, networks can "go blind" to east-west traffic between microservices, creating gaps that Netscout's technology aims to fill. He announced a partnership with Palo Alto Networks to feed Netscout's data into Palo Alto's solutions, characterizing Netscout's role as "detection" and Palo Alto's as "mitigation." Kelley also stated that 5G network slicing, which he described as building virtual networks over physical infrastructure, remains "three to five years away" due to market maturity and device availability, and that the "killer app" for 5G has not yet been found. In a 2017 interview, Kelley emphasized that Netscout's core mission is providing visibility to help carriers become more agile as they transition to cloud-based, software-defined networks. He noted that carriers are moving toward the model of large web players like Facebook and Google, using common hardware platforms and automation to roll out services quickly. Separately, in a 2018 sermon at a Deaf Baptist conference, Kelley spoke about holding fast to the King James Version of the Bible, rejecting evolution as "nonsense," and encouraging listeners to "seek the Lord, not the things of this world."