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VMware, Cisco, NetApp combat ‘accidental’ IT

VMware, Cisco, NetApp combat ‘accidental’ IT

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 26 Nov 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

IT giants Cisco, VMware and NetApp believe many of today’s enterprise IT shops have built their infrastructure unpredictably and without a purposeful design. Find out how these vendors plan to address this problem

Most of today’s data centres have been built and powered by “accidental architecture,” according to a group of executives from Cisco Systems Inc., VMware Inc. and NetApp Inc.

The three companies got together in front of customers Thursday in Toronto to present their views on why data centres must break away from siloed operations and how the three companies are working together to address this problem.

Val Bercovici, a senior director with NetApp’s CTO office, said that most enterprises today have acquired their network, server and storage level infrastructure through a variety of separately funded projects. “The money didn’t come from one place,” he said.

Despite the downsides brought as a result of the recession, many IT shops can actually use the struggling economy to focus investments and give IT a meaningful seat at the boardroom table, Bercovici said.

And while Cisco, VMware and NetApp all agree that this can only be achieved through virtualization and private clouds, investment in this technology without the proper focus is destined to fail.

Executives from each company highlighted their role in the Virtualized Dynamic Data Centre strategy, which is a joint venture between the three companies to offer network, server and storage solutions that work well together.

Cisco is bringing its Nexus 1000 virtual switches and unified computing servers to the partnership, NetApp is delivering on the virtual storage component, and of course, VMware is providing much of the virtualization capability.

Under the strategy, the three companies will bring enterprises an end-to-end secure multi-tenancy platform.

The plan was announced earlier this year, but company executives said it wouldn’t be aggressively pushed in marketing campaigns until early 2010.

The strategy is not focused on building better individual networking or storage devices, but rather building them to work better together, said Jason Reil, product sales specialist with Cisco. He added that siloed IT shops might have actually hit the ceiling in terms of the cost and efficiency savings they can achieve.


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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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