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IBM experiments with 3D virtual data centre

IBM experiments with 3D virtual data centre

By:  Jon Brodkin  On: 21 Feb 2008 For: Network World (SS) Creator

A Big Blue project allows IT managers to monitor a three-dimensional, real-time view of their computing resources, even if they are spread across the globe. Looks like Second Life, but this is no game

IBM is giving new meaning to the phrase "virtual data center." And it looks a lot more like Second Life than VMware.

Rather than build a virtual world for online gaming or to give users an alternative reality, Big Blue made a virtual world where IT executives can examine and manipulate hardware running in their very real data centers. The IBM project -- called 3-D Data Center -- gives IT shops a 3-dimensional, real-time virtual view of their data centre resources, even if they are spread across the globe.

"It's a new way to look at systems and interact with them," says IBM researcher Michael Osias, the man behind this new idea. "Objects aren't just visualizations. You can think of them as little machines."

So instead of battling wizards and warriors, data centre administrators get to play with their servers and storage ( compare storage products ). And it does look something like a game, even if it is not one, Osias notes. IBM contends its new technology will help businesses identify underutilized machines that can be eliminated, distribute workload among data centers, monitor power and cooling, and move processing to cooler sites depending on the weather.

Using avatars, IT operations executives move through their virtual data centres, viewing "a tailored 3-D replica of servers, racks, networking, power and cooling equipment."

A combination of open source software and IBM-built tools, the virtual data center can provide visualizations of any type of hardware, regardless of the vendor, as long as it has a network API. Instead of reading text describing the conditions of a data centre, IT managers can look out for flames showing hotspots, examine visualizations that show server utilization rates, or receive alerts about system failures.

Just to make things linguistically confusing, you can even use the virtual world to modify virtual servers (the kind made possible by VMware) in a real data centre.

"We have an ability to basically funnel events through the virtual world and back into the real world. Right now it's focused on power management but we'll continue to extend that functionality," Osias explains.

"We can kick off power management of a virtual machine," he continues. Taking an action in the IBM virtual world can send a command to IBM's Enterprise Workload Manager, which executes the corresponding act in a real-life data centre.

3-D Data Center was conceived by Osias and colleagues as an experiment last year when IBM was pursuing a big initiative around virtual worlds. Osias decided to build a system of Web-based tools that could aggregate geographically dispersed data centre resources into one virtual setting. IBM built a few basic models, one suited to the banking world, another for the automotive industry, and a third that looks like something out of Star Trek, according to Osias. To make it secure, the virtual world for each customer is hosted on an Intranet rather than the World Wide Web. The virtual world will be deployed in each customer's intranet through an IBM service engagement. IBM officials would not say how much these service engagements cost or how much money Big Blue poured into the project.


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Jon Brodkin Jon Brodkin is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

Comments (1)

3D virtual Data Center
by Bored Security Guard 2/23/2008 12:00:00 AMI can't believe I'm going to be the first to say this but will it run Doom?
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