SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Integrating IT >> Project Management

Small outfit hoping to solve gigantic infrastructure puzzle

Small outfit hoping to solve gigantic infrastructure puzzle

By:  Dan McLean  On: 08 Jun 2006 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

It’s a small group tackling a great big computing problem. The Infrastructure Management Institute (IMI) out of Northern Kentucky University is wrestling with the greatest single obstacle to safer and highly reliable computing: The inability to efficiently control and manage the highly distributed technology that drives most businesses.

It’s a small group tackling a great big computing problem.

The Infrastructure Management Institute (IMI) out of Northern Kentucky University is wrestling with the greatest single obstacle to safer and highly reliable computing: The inability to efficiently control and manage the highly distributed technology that drives most businesses.

If successful, IT infrastructure — things like servers, network routers, switches, and management and security applications — would work together more smoothly, perform better and likely cost less to maintain.

To understand why IT infrastructure must be brought under greater control, it’s necessary to backtrack a bit. Advances in computing technology, particularly during the past 15 years or so, have largely focused on what technocrats like to describe as “feeds and speeds.” Innovation has brought the IT world lightning-quick microchips, wired networks with speed to burn, and a selection of personal productivity, business, finance and accounting applications for small business and even home users that 25 years ago would have only been available to major corporations.

As a result, poor performance and downtime are intolerable for many companies. Yet while computing today works extremely well in isolation on a company network, the same can’t be said for distributed systems. Extending things too far beyond known business IT boundaries is increasingly risky. Too risky for many organizations.

The problem is rooted in the fact that so much of today’s IT infrastructure isn’t, or can’t be, managed properly. That means it’s almost impossible to tell where data gets sent across networks, where it might originate, how it travels and where it may end up. As a result, businesses are inclined to proceed with extreme caution when it comes to opening up access to their network resources or extending their IT capabilities.

For that reason, IT has arguably hit a wall. As things currently stand, computing simply can’t provide much value to companies beyond what’s currently available unless major breakthroughs are made in controlling and managing the power of computing.

Enter IMI. This non-profit collection of academics, business innovators and technology vendors hopes to become an international resource centre for IT infrastructure management and best practices. Knowledge sharing is the key as the IMI seeks to become a collaborative home to the field’s experts, many of whom are currently toiling in isolation on new tools and techniques to enable software programs to work more smoothly together, and make systems, networks and software easier to manage.

“There needs to be somebody looking out for tomorrow and taking IT to a place where it isn’t,” says Tim Ferguson, executive director of the IMI.

“We’re building the content and the concept. We’ll set up workgroups for network and systems management, and speak with those who are working on things. We’re looking to bring in vendors who are focused on enterprise and infrastructure management, key application providers, and major companies who utilize IT management.”


Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 858   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Dan McLean Dan McLean 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.

Related Content

Time to review your identity management strategy
Time to review your identity management strategyConsolidation and technology change will mark the identity management solution market in the near future, say industry analysts. Organizations that aren't already regularly looking at their IDM strategies should be to make sure their business goals and infrastructure align. Experts suggest some guidelines
Cautious about 802.11n
Cautious about 802.11nNorth American organizations are shying away from “n,” and not merely because the standard hasn’t been finalized
The Demo: HP announces BSM software
The Demo: HP announces BSM softwareThe company's latest versions of its business service management product are designed to give IT administrators a view into network issues and composite applications. Take a closer look
Microsoft's Live Mesh: The IT department implications
even though it seems to signal a shift from its pc-centric corporate philosophy, i wouldn’t ca
BI plus BPM plus business rules equals a new kind of IT system
one of my overworked colleagues was recently asked about a project that hadn’t yet gotten off the ground. he replied, “that’s a strategic issue, and right now we only have time for operational issues.” pricewaterhousecoopers is convinced we won’t be able to separate the two for much longer.in the consulting firm’s latest technology forecast (once
blog comments powered by Disqus