Tata launches self‑healing network
Tata Communications unveiled a self-healing, software-defined global network intended to improve resilience and data-center connectivity—an indicator that automated infrastructure and observability are front-and-center for carriers. The announcement highlights industry-level demand for engineers who understand software-defined networking and automated recovery. (webwire.com)
Tata Communications officially launched IZO™ Data Centre (DC) Dynamic Connectivity on March 24, 2026, positioning the platform to link key enterprise data centres across five continents. (tatacommunications.com)) The company says IZO DC uses deterministic multi‑path routing to detect route failures and automatically reroute traffic within seconds, targeting service availability greater than 99.99% for mission‑critical workloads. (tatacommunications.com)) The offering includes a unified digital interface and APIs that expose real‑time KPIs and proactive alerts, with a self‑service portal that Tata and coverage report can scale bandwidth on demand—advertised capability ranges from 1G up to 100G+. (tatacommunications.com)) Tata says the platform applies AI‑driven predictive capacity forecasting so enterprises can activate resilience only when needed, and that a consumption‑based pricing model can reduce idle backup capacity and operational costs by up to 30%. (tatacommunications.com)) Genius Wong, Tata Communications’ Executive Vice President and Chief Technology Officer, described IZO DC as shifting resilience “from a reactive process to an autonomous capability” in the company’s launch commentary. (communicationstoday.co.in)) Market reaction to the announcement included a near‑term share lift; Tata Communications’ stock was reported to have closed about 1.76% higher at ₹1,407.30 on the NSE in same‑day coverage. (datacenters.economictimes.indiatimes.com))