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Mobile infrastructure company Cornerstone (CTIL), which was originally established as part of a UK network sharing agreement between O2 (Virgin Media) and Vodafone (Vantage Towers), has today announced a new strategic partnership with StonesThro to deploy a nationally distributed Micro-Edge cloud infrastructure via their estate of c.16,000 mast / cell sites.
The idea of installing what are effectively mini data centres on such infrastructure, across Cornerstone’s national estate, is an interesting one. The approach could be used to address the ever-present need for increased data processing speed and capacity, data sovereignty, and national infrastructure resilience etc. Obviously, this would make all those mast sites even more commercially attractive in the process.
Given the current international climate, it probably doesn’t hurt to be deploying a UK-centric solution to the growing dependency on centralised, often foreign-owned, cloud architectures – reducing exposure to international jurisdiction problems and external interference.
“The core of the Cornerstone and StonesThro partnership is the shared ambition that for critical systems to be truly resilient, computing power must reside within national borders and closer to the point of use,” said the announcement.
Pat Coxen, CEO at Cornerstone, said:
“The breadth and reach of our infrastructure estate has the ability to enable UK digital connectivity on an unrivalled scale. By partnering with StonesThro, we are evolving our estate infrastructure from being predominantly about communication to focussing on locally processing data, and the intelligent application of information.
We are providing the ‘where’ for the micro-edge, enabling a network that is not only resilient, but also physically situated within the communities and industries it serves.”
At present, it’s unclear precisely how many such sites will be deployed with the new solution or who will be looking to harness it, but in theory this might also help to improve the economic models for deploying new mast sites in some otherwise challenging areas. Time will tell.