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VMware Canada chief pushes internal cloud

VMware Canada chief pushes internal cloud

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 03 Feb 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

The virtualization giant says its most sophisticated customers are already rolling out internal clouds to power their apps, but some industry observers aren’t seeing the same kind of traction

Rather than going to multiple software-as-a-service (SaaS) providers to host your applications, VMware Inc. wants you to build a private, cloud-like infrastructure in your own data centre. But with the in-house skills and costs required to make it happen, virtualization experts argue that VMware’s vision is far away from becoming a reality.

Last September, the virtualization giant unveiled Virtual Datacenter OS, a set of services that allows IT managers to “pool all types of hardware resources – servers, storage and network – into an aggregated on-premise cloud,” according to the company. This will enable users to abstract the underlining physical infrastructure from the applications and give VMware customers the ability to offer SaaS on their own premise.

“If you look at the other cloud models, companies like Amazon and Google, or SaaS providers like Salesforce.com, the challenge is you essentially have to adopt all of their applications in order to make the model work,” said Grant Aitken, VMware’s Canadian country manager.

Aitken pointed out that the transition from a company’s existing in-house applications to a third-party hosted application can be a gigantic stumbling block for most IT shops. VMware sees its technology as an on-ramp to a cloud model that doesn’t require a change in applications, he said.

“The idea that going to a Salesforce.com or any other single area software provider and that you’re suddenly going to be able to jump over and solve the vast majority of issues around IT costs is unrealistic,” Aitken said. “If you switch to Salesforce.com, you’ve solved on application area, but you might have another 40 to go. If you buy each one on a service basis, you’ve got a bit of a mess on your hands with systems that don’t talk to each other.”

But Scott Elliott, senior systems network specialist at Christie Digital Systems Inc. and leader of the Southwest Ontario VMware User Group, said that while companies want to avoid sending corporate data to SaaS providers, the amount of skill required for in-house cloud computing is far too significant right now.

“If you don’t have the in-house knowledge or skill sets required, it ends up being IT managers sticking their neck out on technology that is still unproven,” he said. “I don’t know if cloud computing is a ready-to-go piece of technology and to be quite frank, all the vendors are still arguing what it actually means. If you ask VMware about cloud computing it will mean something different than if you ask Oracle or Microsoft.”

“How do you choose something that’s still maturing?”


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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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