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Infrastructure July 15, 2024 5 min read

Hyper App Launches First Enterprise Public Cloud in Uzbekistan

Akmaljon Musaev
Akmaljon MusaevCEO, Hyper App
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Hyper App Launches First Enterprise Public Cloud in Uzbekistan

After two years of infrastructure build-out, Hyper App officially launched the first enterprise-grade public cloud in Uzbekistan — offering a contractual 99.999% uptime SLA and compute throughput benchmarked at 2.7× that of equivalent AWS instances in Frankfurt and Singapore.

Why This Matters for the Region

Before Hyper App, a company in Tashkent had two options: host critical workloads on European or Asian cloud regions (slow, expensive, legally complicated) or maintain on-premise hardware (even slower, more expensive, and a full-time job in itself). There was no third option.

We built that third option. Enterprise-grade infrastructure, physically located in Uzbekistan, with a local team that answers the phone — without the premium that AWS or Azure charge for the privilege of your data sitting in Frankfurt.

Launch Day Benchmarks

  • 2.7× higher compute throughput vs. equivalent AWS m6i instances — measured on CPU-bound and I/O-bound workloads over a 72-hour benchmark run
  • 4–8ms application response time for Tashkent-based users vs. 80–120ms when served from AWS Frankfurt — making regional cloud effectively 15–20× more responsive for local users
  • 99.999% uptime SLA — contractually backed, with automatic credits if we miss. That's less than 6 minutes of allowed downtime per year.
  • Law No. 213 compliant — all data processed and stored within Uzbekistan, with full audit trail support for regulated industries

The Hardware Stack

The infrastructure is built on Lenovo ThinkAgile HX hyperconverged nodes running Intel Xeon Gold processors, NVMe-backed storage, and a Mellanox 100Gbps non-blocking network fabric. This isn't repurposed office hardware — it's the same class of equipment used by major financial institutions in Europe and the US.

The data center itself features N+1 redundant power (including diesel generator backup), precision cooling, biometric access controls, and 24/7 physical security. We built this to the standard we'd want for our own mission-critical systems.

"We are not just building a cloud platform. We are building the digital backbone of Uzbekistan's economy — infrastructure that will outlast any single company or government initiative."

What Comes Next

The launch covers core Compute, Block Storage, and Managed Databases. Over the following 12 months, we are expanding into Managed Kubernetes, S3-compatible Object Storage, and dedicated GPU clusters for AI and machine learning workloads. The demand from local AI startups and research institutions is already significant.

We're also beginning conversations with partners in Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan about extending the sovereign cloud fabric across the region — so that Central Asian companies can keep their data local while still accessing world-class infrastructure.