Hewlett Packard Enterprise Announces New On-Demand Cloud Service: HPE GreenLake Private Cloud Business Edition

Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) has announced a new on-demand cloud service, HPE GreenLake Private Cloud Business Edition, which has been adopted by Istanbul Water and Sewerage Administration (ISKI). The new service will replace ISKI’s existing server and storage systems, and will provide the company with a more scalable and secure infrastructure.

Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) has announced a new on-demand cloud service, HPE GreenLake Private Cloud Business Edition, which has been adopted by Istanbul Water and Sewerage Administration (ISKI). The new service will replace ISKI’s existing server and storage systems, and will provide the company with a more scalable and secure infrastructure.

Hewlett Packard Enterprise Announces New On-Demand Cloud Service: HPE GreenLake Private Cloud Business Edition

Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) has announced a new on-demand cloud service, HPE GreenLake Private Cloud Business Edition, which has been adopted by the Istanbul Water and Sewerage Administration (ISKI).

ISKI was looking to replace its existing server and storage systems, and chose HPE GreenLake after determining that its previous storage infrastructure was nearing its limits and required an upgrade.

HPE GreenLake supports wastewater management and water distribution across kilometers, and ISKI is also developing new mobile applications, enhancing billing systems, and establishing a disaster recovery site using a range of Microsoft solutions including Active Directory and Exchange.

The collaboration between HPE and ISKI has resulted in a centralized and streamlined storage infrastructure, with a unified file server storage system across local and remote sites.

Additionally, ISKI has enhanced application performance with the advanced artificial intelligence capabilities of HPE InfoSight, which enables the prediction and prevention of potential issues.

HPE GreenLake Private Cloud Business Edition also comes with disaggregated hyperconverged infrastructure (DHCI), which doesn’t require systemwide upgrades when one component reaches its limit.