| By Virtualization News | Article Rating: |
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| February 4, 2008 01:00 AM EST | Reads: |
13,680 |
According to a new study by Saugatuck Technology Inc., virtualization will have the single largest effect on IT budgets for hardware and support over the next three years, and just three companies - Cisco, VMware, and Citrix (previously XenSource) - will dominate IT virtualization, accounting for 60 percent of all new virtualization deployments.The lead author of the report, published in December 2007, is Charlie Burns, who notes: "All too frequently, the general concept of virtualization is equated with the specifics of server virtualization. That is because server virtualization, or more precisely, mainframe virtualization has been a fixture of the IT landscape for decades. But virtualization can be applied to all IT resources from servers to storage to networks to desktops and is not one-size-fits-all."
Research highlights from the report include:
- Virtualization poses a revenue threat to vendors of microprocessors, servers, Operating Systems, Middleware, and applications.
- Virtualization poses challenges in IT management which result in opportunities for vendors of IT management offerings.
- While all facets of IT Virtualization offerings will see enhancements in functionality and performance, the most significant enhancements will be in microprocessor, hypervisor, and operating system function for Server Virtualization.
- Through 2010, Server Virtualization will have the single largest impact on budgets for IT hardware and support. The second largest impact will be network virtualization.
- Through 2010, three vendors - Cisco, VMware, and XenSource (now Citrix) - will dominate IT Virtualization, accounting for 60 percent of all new virtualization deployments.
Published February 4, 2008 Reads 13,680
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Barry Fidlow 02/18/08 10:37:53 AM EST | |||
In the ending comments of your article you asked “"Who's bridging the connectivity divide? Data centers will run physical and virtual machines, on multiple platforms, cross-connected to different networks and storage, shifting in real-time. Who's managing 'infrastructure virtualization,' beyond CPU virtualization." For that answer I suggest you look at DataSynapse. Their virtualization software works across disparate systems (UNIX, Linux windows.) and acts as a management console for applications and VM’s sharing that aggregated computer power and giving companies unheard of utilization figures. Also because there product is “application aware” it can automate the process that capacity planers go through when planning a VMware environment and allocating VM’s to the applications. This takes the swag out of allocating and gives a reduction in the cost of managing VMware images. I was surprised to find that this leading edge company was not even mentioned in your article they really do have a compelling story. |
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