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Director of distributed systems, First American Corp.

Director of distributed systems, First American Corp.

By:  Greg Meckbach  On: 17 Sep 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

With virtualization, British Columbia's health administrator saves $70,000 a year on hydro alone, but probably will not jump on the off-premise bandwagon anytime soon. What two VMware customers had to say at VMWorld

LAS VEGAS -- VMware Inc. is touting its vCloud initiative as one that would let companies run virtualized applications on service providers’ machines during peak hours, but one Canadian VMware customer probably won’t be doing this any time soon.

“There are regulations that mean we have to keep (the data) in our environment, especially in Canada,” said Kris Jmaeff, senior server analyst and information systems security specialist with the Kelowna, B.C.-based Interior Health Authority (IHA), which runs 183 health care facilities. “We’re looking into those technologies but will probably not gravitate to that right now.”

Jmaeff made his comments during a presentation at VMWorld 2008, VMware’s tenth annual conference at the Venetian conference centre.

For nearly four years, IHA has been using VMware’s Virtual Data Infrastructure (VDI) technology to combine medical and business applications on to the same physical servers using virtualization technology from VMware. This is designed to reduce hardware costs by using more of the same servers, rather than adding additional boxes.

At one point, he said, IHA needed 10 new servers per week.

Because much of the data contains patient information, Jmaeff is cool to the idea of using vCloud, which is designed to let companies use outsourced data centres when their servers are at or near capacity, to a point where application response time is too slow. Announced Monday at VMWorld, the VCloud Initiative lets service providers offer hosting and managed services under the VMware Ready brand. It also encompasses VMware technologies and application programming interfaces that let companies provision applications using their own data centres.

The ability to use their own infrastructure as a cloud computing resources should be attractive to companies even if some of their data is sensitive, said John Gilmartin, group product manager at VMware.

“Customers are certainly going to make decisions as to which types of applications and services to federate out into the cloud and one of the key questions to ask is, ‘What are the regulatory requirements that I have, what kind of security requirements do I have,’” Gilmartin said in an interview with ComputerWorld Canada.

“I think certainly in the short term, for some customers, those are going to focus in the direction of developing internal clouds, building an internal cloud they can easily manage separately from the underlying hardware, but I think there’s still many opportunities in those environments for other customers to federate out services and applications.”


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Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach is editor of Network World Canada and has worked for ComputerWorld Canada, Communications & Networking and Computing Canada.

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