The two said their collaboration would support enterprises with local and global reach, that are looking to transition from legacy MPLS networks to "a dynamic and scalable software-defined infrastructure".
It's the latest win for neutrality.one, which in the last 12 months has established a point of presence in datamena in Dubai and is efficiently scaling its operations locally and globally.
George Szlosarek (pictured), CEO at neutrality.one said: “The rapid adoption of cloud services across Asia-Pac and the Middle East is driving demand for elastic, scalable and secure networking. Enterprises across these regions accelerated cloud adoption in 2020 and in 2021 they’re recognising the benefits of going beyond MPLS and adopting SDWAN. Our goal is to make that migration as simple and seamless as possible.
“Together with Taeknizon, we’re helping enterprises to maximize the potential of the cloud and remove any limits on their agility and scalability. They benefit from a smooth transition to SDWAN that underpins cloud-first strategies," he added.
Headquartered in Singapore, Taeknizon is a private cloud service company with operations and infrastructure in UAE, Qatar, KSA, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, India and the US.
With its -aaS business model, Taeknizon offers infrastructure-, backup-, disaster recovery-, and security-as-as-service, in addition to cyber security, consultancy and data centre solutions.
COO Anithan Chandran said: “Growth in cloud adoption is matched with the need for a new networking model. Our enterprise customers want to get the most out of their cloud deployments and SDWAN can be a big part of that. By working with neutrality.one, we’re expanding the solutions we can offer enterprise customers and offering them a flexible foundation for connecting their applications and services
“The team at neutrality.one are experts in networking the cloud and understand what it takes to deliver reliable, resilient and secure connectivity. We look forward to growing together and helping more enterprises make the move to the cloud.”