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Flexibility trumps costs savings as key ’virtualization’ driver

Flexibility trumps costs savings as key ’virtualization’ driver

By:  Nestor E Arellano  On: 12 Jun 2006 For: IT World Canada Creator

Flexibility overrides cost savings as a driver for adopting server virtualization technology, a recent industry survey indicates. The Forrester survey findings are echoed by a Canadian survey of 500 large and mid-sized firms conducted by research firm IDC Canada Ltd. in Toronto.

Assistance in disaster recovery was seen as yet another driver, as 23 per cent of the respondents indicated they were using virtualization to help in business continuity.

Although awareness of Microsoft Inc.'s Virtual Server 2005 product has risen dramatically from the when it first hit the market, Forrester said most respondents list VMware Inc. of Palo Alto, Calif. as their virtualization vendor of choice. Asked which single vendor they would consider, 68 per cent chose VMware while only nine per cent sided with Microsoft.

VMware says it hopes go beyond offering simple server consolidation and the management of a few virtual machines coaxed out of a physical server.

The company says its recently launched Infrastructure 3 will allow data centres to manage servers farms as a shared utility that can be allocated to different business units or projects.

The software also frees the hands of information technology (IT) managers by migrating applications automatically to available hardware resources on demand without disrupting ongoing transactions.

"This is the nirvana that IT managers have been asking for," said Brian Byun, vice-president for products and alliance of VMware.

Instead of an array of server boxes specifically configured for a given OS and application, Infrastructure 3 maps a set of applications over a large pool of servers. The applications can be provisioned instantly and recovered at the same or remote locations regardless of operating systems or hardware.

While Infrastructure 3 is available now, rivals are still fine tuning their offering.

Microsoft for instance, will be replacing its Virtual Server 2005 with a new Hypervisor bundled into its Longhorn Server sometime in 2007.

Hilary Wittman, the Windows server product manager for Microsoft Canada, says that system management is where their product excels.

"Industry focus is moving from virtualization enabling to server management," said Wittman. "We've retained a lot of the desirable components of Virtual Server but we made sure we didn't add in more complexity. Users will get strong system management service."

Forrester said those using or seriously considering using Virtual Server are doing so because it was originally priced lower. Both Microsoft and VMware have since made their entry level products free.

The Forrester study sees Microsoft "will become a factor" as a top choice for deployment only in 2007 and 2008.

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Nestor E Arellano Nestor E Arellano Nestor Arellano – Newswire Specialist Nestor edits and posts newswire content for ITWorldCanada’s online publications and e-newsletters. Nestor joined ITWC in 2006 as a senior writer and ... more

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