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Sharpening your virtualization vision (Part I)

Sharpening your virtualization vision (Part I)

By:  Edited by Dave Carey  On: 30 Sep 2007 For: IT World Canada Creator

Virtualization is one of the most talked about concepts in it these days. A report from London, Ontario-based Info-Tech Research Group sheds light on the adoption of this technology and its near- and long-term potential for the enterprise.

Virtualization is one of the most talked about concepts in it these days. A report from London, Ontario-based Info-Tech Research Group sheds light on the adoption of this technology and its near- and long-term potential for the enterprise. In part one of a two-part article, we tap Info-Tech’s research to better understand virtualization and it utility infrastructures. Next month we take a closer look at the impact of virtualization on small to mid-sized firms, and how the landscape for this technology will evolve over time.

As virtual machines become more ubiquitous, IT executives will need to focus on managing the utility infrastructure to get the most value from this technology. Innovative IT decision-makers can use this technology to create more agile and cost-effective data centre infrastructures.

Info-Tech Research Group sees virtualization as a critical component of flexible and responsive utility IT infrastructures. The company’s research analyzes current trends in virtual-machine adoption by small to mid-sized enterprises (SMEs), and examines the continued growth in adoption throughout 2007. This two-part article taps into Info-Tech’s research and includes a look at:

• How “virtualization” has come to mean x86/x64 processor virtualization.

• The current adoption of virtualization and how it is being used by SMEs.

• Longer-term potential for virtualization for IT/business alignment.

• Predictions on the near-term future of the x86/x64 virtualization market.

ADOPTION TRENDS

Processor virtualization has rapidly gained a foothold among SMEs as these enterprises seek to cost-effectively manage server infrastructure consolidation and growth. The likelihood of virtualization in the enterprise increases with infrastructure size and complexity. However, the infrastructure impact of x86/x64 processor virtualization is greater for small to mid-sized enterprises than it is for large enterprises.

The most immediate practical benefit of virtualization can be found in the savings achieved on server hardware purchases through greater and more efficient utilization of processor capability. The application testing and development realm is an especially strong candidate for virtualization, although an increasing number of enterprises are using virtualization in a production environment. Among surveyed enterprises, ranging from 250 to 5,000 employees, 22 per cent say they are using virtualization in production environments and a further 13 per cent say they plan to use it in a production environment within a year.

Virtualization adoption is much higher among IT departments that focus on innovation for strategic advantage than for those that focus solely on cost control. Info-Tech sees virtualization as a critical component of building flexible and responsive utility IT infrastructures. In a utility type of IT infrastructure, virtualization is used to create abstract processing and storage from the underlying hardware, and is allocated to specific applications as required. This flexible and dynamic structure improves IT agility by allowing for the quick provisioning of resources to business initiatives when and where needed.


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Edited by Dave Carey Edited by Dave Carey 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.

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