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Novell hypes new cloud computing plan

Novell hypes new cloud computing plan

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 07 Dec 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

The company’s Canadian president said its 2010 roadmap will bring much needed intelligence to cloud and virtual computing environments. Find out why Novell thinks it is helping to evolve the market, and what industry observers have to say about the plan

Virtual or cloud-based workloads should always be connected to identity and security management features no matter where in the enterprise they travel, according to Novell Canada chief Ross Chevalier.

 

This idea is the key message Novell Inc. wants IT managers to hear after the company announced its new “intelligent workload management” strategy on Monday. The plan will give users the ability to secure applications across a variety of different virtualization environments, including shops that use VMware Inc.Microsoft Corp. and Citrix Systems Inc. technologies.

 

Novell’s initiative includes a scheduled Q2 2010 release of Identity Manager 4, which the company says will add role-based access controls that allow for real-time provisioning of access based on a user’s identity.

 

The plan will also bring the Novell Cloud Security Service to virtual administrators next year, a new tool that will allow them to send out their identity and security management protocols to software-as-a-service providers.

 

“This is a significant update that will bring a greater level of proactive controls for how users get access to different systems,” Chevalier said, referring to both of these forthcoming products.

 

The workload — which according to Novell is a self-contained unit comprised of the OS, middleware and application — should act “almost like a ball” that IT administrators can pick up and move around with hardware independence, he added.

 

Also, under Novell’s plan, the workloads will have real-time monitoring and reporting features that safely automate the application and its compliance with IT policies.

 

An example of this functionality in practice would be a claim workload at a health insurance agency. Because the workload contains personal data from a client, it would intelligently act in accordance with IT policy and run the claim on the private cloud behind the firewall, as opposed being deployed on the company’s public cloud.

 

Chevalier said that when talking to Canadian CIOs and IT leaders, it’s apparent that tomorrow’s IT shops will be a mix of physical, virtual and cloud-based services. This means that the ability to shift to a more automated, policy-based approach will become increasingly important for Canadian companies expanding their virtual infrastructure.


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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.

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