AI makes networking matter again

This post was originally published on Info World

As important as Cilium is, however, the bigger story is that AI is forcing enterprises to care again about infrastructure details they had happily abstracted away. That doesn’t mean every company should hand-roll its network stack, but it does mean that platform teams can no longer treat networking as an untouchable utility layer. If inference is where enterprise AI becomes real, then latency, telemetry, segmentation, and internal traffic policy are no longer secondary concerns. They’re an essential part of product quality, operational reliability, and developer experience.

More than the network

Nor is this isolated to Cillium, specifically, or networking, generally. AI keeps forcing us to care about things we’d hoped to forget. As I’ve written, it’s fun to fixate on fancy AI demos, but the real work is to make these systems work reliably, securely, and economically in production. Just as important, in our rush to make AI dependable at enterprise scale, we can’t overlook the need to make the whole stack easier to use for developers, easier to govern by IT/ops, and faster under real-world load.

“If an AI-backed service responds faster and behaves more reactively, it will perform better in the market. And the foundation for that is

Read the rest of this post, which was originally published on Info World.

Previous Post

Updated: AWS Middle East Outage After Data Centers Hit by Drone Strikes

Next Post

FinOps for agents: Loop limits, tool-call caps and the new unit economics of agentic SaaS