Riot Games Esports Co-Head Talks ‘League of Legends’ 2017 World Championship

The world’s top competitive video gamers are facing off in China over the next few weeks for the League of Legends 2017 World Championship, one of the premier tournaments in the fast-growing world of esports.

Hosted by Riot Games, the company that makes the popular League of Legends (LoL) online game, the tournament’s early rounds turned in a fair amount of excitement and upsets, though last year’s champion is still standing. The Korean professional esports team SK Telecom T1 remains a favorite in a field that also features teams like Samsung Galaxy (sponsored by the South Korean electronics giant) and the North American team Cloud 9.

If none of those names ring a bell, then the rapid ascension of esports has likely passed you by. Competitive gaming’s popularity around the world has exploded in recent years, and the esports industry is now expected to generate more than $ 1.5 billion in annual revenue by 2020, according to one estimate.

Meanwhile, major professional sports teams like the New York Yankees and Cleveland Cavaliers are throwing money at esports, while tech giants like Amazon and Google compete to lure gaming fans to stream live gameplay and competitions on their digital video platforms, Twitch and YouTube, respectively. Last year, Riot Games (which is owned by Chinese tech giant Tencent) signed a reported $ 300 million streaming rights deal with Walt Disney’s BAMTech, and this year’s LoL world championship tournament is available for streaming around the world on Twitch and YouTube.

The influx of media rights deals has also opened the door for a range of high-profile corporate sponsors, with Riot Games landing sponsorships in recent years from the likes of Acer Gaming, Coca-Cola, T-Mobile, and Mercedes-Benz.

This week Fortune caught up with Jarred Kennedy, the co-head of esports at Riot Games, to discuss the world championship (the finals will take place Nov. 4 at the Bird’s Nest National Stadium in Beijing) as well as the overall growth of the esports industry and Riot’s plans, much like rival Activision Blizzard, to remodel its own esports league after major professional sports leagues like the NFL and NBA.

The following conversation has been edited and condensed for clarity.

Fortune: What are some of the big storylines fans will be following heading into the quarterfinals of the LoL World Championships this weekend?

Kennedy: Where to begin? We’ve got some great teams that have made it through. Lots of regions are still alive. You’ve got your defending champions, SK Telecom T1, where they always are, which is contending. But, you’ve got teams that are potentially going to give them a run for their money. I think if [Chinese team] Royal Never Give Up and SK Telecom T1 wind up meeting in the semifinals in Shanghai that could be incredible. Honestly, any of the match-ups with the teams we have right now are going to be really fun to watch, because they’ve all proven themselves to get to this stage. And, the competition just keeps getting better and better the deeper we get into the tournament. That’s one of the reasons that worlds is so compelling.

How has the media rights aspect of the esports business expanded in recent years for Riot?

I think what you’re seeing is the maturation of our sport. With esports, I wouldn’t say it’s entered the mainstream, but it is increasingly an option that marketers look to. And, that’s great for us, because what we’re trying to do is build up the overall ecosystem, and having those increases in revenue coming in on that side allows us to invest in the professional players, the teams, and it allows these players to make a career out of this in a really meaningful way.

That leads into the bigger question of the esports industry’s overall growth trajectory. What are the areas of business that you think are most ripe for increasing revenue in the industry?

There are lots of different pools of revenue. Big ones would include media rights, which not unlike the NFL, NBA, or the Premier League, media rights are a large driver. For some games, including ours, there’s in-game content, and that’s something that’s unique to esports, as opposed to stick-and-ball or traditional sports, where there’s an opportunity for teams to participate in some of the in-game revenue streams. I think those are probably the biggest ones, but we’re always on the lookout for new ways to engage with fans of our sport.

You used to work at Sony Pictures Television. Would it benefit esports to make that leap to being more of a presence on traditional TV networks?

We don’t feel the need to go to TV as a point of validation. We’ve found that a lot of our fans of this sport are online, they tend to consume digitally, and thus the BAMTech deal and some other things we’ve done—negotiations with Twitch, YouTube, etc.—is just to serve them where they are. But, we’re not looking to be on NBC at 8 p.m. on a Saturday broadcasting to all of America, because we don’t think that’s where our fans want to watch, and we think it would probably be casting too wide of a net.

Why model Riot Games’ North American League of Legends Championship Series league after major professional sports leagues with revenue-sharing and a players association?

We’ve always looked at professional sports, not because we want to model exactly what other sports do, but even when you’re attempting to innovate, sometimes there are things that already exist in the world that work really well and work for a reason, and we shouldn’t be afraid to use some of that. Our goal is to have sophisticated owners of teams that can operate at a high level, know how to build businesses, know how to build sports, and who aren’t going to be working against each other, but are going to be collaborating in the best interests of fans around the world.

Going back to your point about esports not yet being in the mainstream, what needs to happen to put esports on the same level as one of the major professional sports leagues?

It takes time to get to the scale of where major sports are today, and I don’t think we have any illusions that we’re going to be able to do that overnight. We do have the advantage of being a digital property that tends to grow faster and can grow more virally. Friends tend to bring their friends into the sport, we found. We’re looking to build the best ecosystem for our fans that we can and we hope that by doing that it will thrive and grow, and over time we’ll have a chance to be as big as some of the major sports that exist today. But our primary goal is delivering value to fans day in and day out. And, if we can do that, then the rest will take care of itself.

Tech

St. Louis Companies Combine Technology for World Class Data Center


St. Louis, Missouri (PRWEB) June 11, 2015

Hostirian, a St. Louis based Hosting and Managed Services company, has chosen Enlogic cabinets, cold-row air containment and intelligent PDUs managed by No Limits Software’s RaMP Data Center Infrastructure Management for their new data center. Both Enlogic and No Limits Software are also headquartered in St. Louis.

“We love that we can work with local companies providing world class solutions for our newest data center in the Globe Building,” said Ken Cox, Vice President of Operations at Hostirian. The 26,000 square foot data center in downtown St. Louis is the largest carrier hotel building in the region. “The new cold-row containment pod provides 800mm wide cabinets, multiple PDUs for redundant power, and make a great home for your equipment,” added Cox. Both of the Hostirian data centers are SSAE-16 compliant, offer HIPAA compliant hosting, and security includes video surveillance, RFID badge readers, and 24x7x365 onsite team members.

Enlogic is a global power management provider and winner of the 2014 DCS Power and Cooling Product of the Year awards. They offer a full lineup of data center solutions including intelligent PDUs, smart cabinets, air containment solutions, and a comprehensive line of environmental monitoring devices.

No Limits Software is a leading provider of data center management solutions, including asset and change management, capacity planning, and real-time monitoring. Their RaMP software is the only DCIM (Data Center Infrastructure Management) solution which provides auto-discovery, automated change management, and real-time monitoring of virtual machines, IT equipment (servers, network, storage), and facilities equipment (power, cooling, environmental). “We’re excited to be working with Enlogic and to be a part of one of the premier data centers in St. Louis,” said Dave Cole, president of No Limits Software. He adds that “the Hostirian team is very professional and their new data center is absolutely first class.”

About Hostirian

Hostirian is a St. Louis Hosting and Managed Services company providing Cloud Servers, Colocation, and Managed Services. Their around the clock Operations Support Services supplement customer teams by offering Help Desk, Monitoring, and SOC. They have 2 fiber connected data centers and over 14 years of experience working with small to medium sized businesses.

Learn more about Hostirian at http://www.hostirian.com.

About Enlogic

Enlogic was founded in 2011 by a group of former APC/Schneider Electric technology executives dedicated to providing innovative solutions to better address growing data center energy management needs. With a commitment to continuous innovation, Enlogic has become the technology leader and expert in data center energy management, helping data centers across the world to discover waste, improve operational efficiency and optimize energy utilization

Learn more about Enlogic at http://www.enlogic.com.

About No Limits Software

No Limits Software is a leading provider of data center management solutions, including asset and change management, capacity planning and real-time monitoring. Their RaMP DCIM flagship solution allows you to more effectively manage your data center. RaMP eliminates the need for physical audits, dramatically reduces the time to find and repair equipment, improves system availability and increases data center energy efficiency by providing accurate real-time monitoring.

Learn more about No Limits Software at http://www.nolimitssoftware.com.







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6WIND Demonstrates Virtual Accelerator for NFV Infrastructure at Dell World

Austin, TX (PRWEB) November 05, 2014

6WIND, a high-performance software company, today announced that it will demonstrate Virtual Accelerator, the first product in its new Speed Series family, at Dell World. 6WIND Virtual Accelerator provides accelerated virtual switching and networking features for virtual infrastructures to enable Network Function Virtualization (NFV), data center virtualization and network appliance virtualization. At Dell World, 6WIND will demonstrate wire speed 240 Gbps aggregate bandwidth on Dell’s NFV platform running an IP Forwarding virtual machine (VM).

6WIND Virtual Accelerator runs within the hypervisor domain with a hardware-independent architecture that allows new and existing VMs to be integrated quickly onto x86-based servers. As the industry’s only transparent virtual infrastructure acceleration solution, 6WIND Virtual Accelerator is provided as a simple software package so that customers do not have to replace or modify existing software such as Open vSwitch (OVS), Linux, Hypervisors and OpenStack.

6WIND Virtual Accelerator delivers:


    Network hardware independence for seamless hardware upgrades, including 10G to 40G to 100G ports
    Wire speed performance required to enable high density, compute intensive VMs on a single server
    Flexible virtual switching support for Open vSwitch and Linux bridge with no modifications
    Complete virtual networking infrastructure with VLAN, VXLAN, Virtual Routing, IP Forwarding, Filtering and NAT
    Native Virtio support for VMs based on different OSs
    High bandwidth for VM to VM communications required for Service Chaining
    Transparent orchestration support for OpenStack

Enabling NFV, Data Center Virtualization and Appliance Virtualization

The networking and telecom industries are undergoing a transformation due to advances with virtualization on standard servers that promise cost savings, scalability and flexibility. However, if the proper software architecture is not deployed on servers with the transition to new generation architecture, competitive advantage and time-to-market will be lost because performance and functionality will decrease versus specialized equipment. 6WIND Virtual Accelerator enables the transition by delivering the performance, features and network hardware independence required for virtual networking on standard servers, without changing the existing infrastructure.

6WIND Virtual Accelerator maximizes virtual infrastructure throughput to enable dozens of high bandwidth, or hundreds of low bandwidth, virtual applications on a server. By leveraging the least amount of compute cores for packet processing, more cores can be used for VMs. Over 200 Gbps virtual infrastructure throughput can be achieved on a single server, with 80% of the processing cores left to run Virtual Network Functions (VNFs) or virtual appliances inside VMs.

Developers can leverage 6WIND Virtual Accelerator to design virtual infrastructure for:

    NFV applications including VNFs such as vEPC, vBRAS, vIPsec, vCDN and more
    Data Center Virtualization such as OpenStack clouds
    Appliance Virtualization for Routers, Application Delivery Controllers, Firewalls, Security Gateways, WAN Optimization and more

“Our NFV platform is open, giving Service Providers a choice of technology to design the best virtual infrastructure for their application requirements,” said Arpit Joshipura, VP of Product Management and Strategy for Dell Networking. “By deploying 6WIND’s Virtual Accelerator on the Dell NFV platform, customers can increase VM bandwidth, density and enable Service Chaining with industry-standard Linux and OpenStack.”

“6WIND enables NFV on Dell’s platform by providing the infrastructure to support high density and compute intensive virtual applications,” said Eric Carmès, CEO and Founder of 6WIND. “Our Virtual Accelerator can seamlessly provide Dell customers with the required combination of hardware independence, performance, features, VM integration and management as a simple software update to their existing architecture.”

6WIND Virtual Accelerator is available for 1, 2 and 4 socket Intel x86-based servers with DPDK, multi-vendor NICs and major Linux distributions.

6WIND Virtual Accelerator will be demonstrated at Dell World in Austin, Texas in 6WIND’s booth #1E6B. For more information on 6WIND Virtual Accelerator, please visit: http://www.6wind.com/products/6wind-virtual-accelerator/

About 6WIND

6WIND’s commercial software solves performance challenges for network vendors in telecom, enterprise and cloud infrastructure markets. The company’s packet processing software is optimized for cost-effective hardware running Linux with a choice of multicore processors to deliver a wide variety of networking and security protocols and features. By solving critical data plane performance challenges on multicore architectures, 6WIND enables a cost-effective value proposition, enabling the transition to the future with network functions virtualization (NFV). 6WIND is based near Paris, France with regional offices in China, Japan, South Korea and the United States. For more information, visit http://www.6wind.com.