RSS FeedInfrastructure

Dell looks to re-architect the datacentre

Dell looks to re-architect the datacentre

Virtualisation drives all inclusive approach

Dell is launching a new series of products to cater for the drive towards virtualisation. In common with companies like HP and Cisco, Dell is looking to develop an all-encompassing architecture within the datacentre, supporting servers, storage, networking and virtualisation.

The company's Virtual Integrated System (VIS) has been designed to support organisation's existing datacentre architecture while moving to a virtual environment.


Related Articles

 

Virtualisation, Big Data and BYOD

Check out our Business IT Hub for opinions and briefings. Read more


"VIS is not a product," said Ed English, Dell's head of product marketing for large enterprises. "It's a strategy, not a solution in itself. But there are products within VIS. We launched our Advanced Infrastructure Manager (AIM) earlier in the year and we're announcing two new components: Creator and Director."

The Dell VIS Self-Service Creator, as its name implies, is a way for organisations to pick and choose business applications. It works by offering a customised catalogue of IT applications and resources, reducing the time it takes to deploy a workload to just minutes. English said that a datacentre manager looking to allocate resources has a headache when it comes to dealing with individual requests as they must be managed. "It's much simpler if you can create small individual templates for specific departments."

"But," he warned, "this can't be about creating a free-for-all, that creates problems of its own. However, by pricing those templates and giving departments budgets, it manages the process. In addition, it gives orga nisations an opportunity to introduce chargeback."

VIS Creator is available now but the other new product from Dell, VIS Director, won't be available until next year. Dell VIS Director is an operations hub for the virtual environment, providing organisations with a monitoring and capacity planning tool, as well acting as a product to handle utilisation reporting. According to English, Director would also offer integration to existing management tools such as Tivoli, if this were the customer's preferred option.

English said that Director does two things allowed the administrator to look backwards." It looks at templates and the workload that has been deployed on those templates." He said that in the longer term, the company was hoping to allow automatic fixes. " If, for example, if a workload was too large or too small for the template. Then the system would automatically implement instant remediation y kicking off a request to Director to allocate more resource, However, this is not something we're going to introduce immediately," English warned.

As well as the new products, English said that Dell was introducing a set of consultancy services to complement the new launches. "We're very conscious of the fact that customers have real challenges moving from rack and stack," he said.

Send to a friend

Email this article to a friend or colleague:


PLEASE NOTE: Your name is used only to let the recipient know who sent the story, and in case of transmission error. Both your name and the recipient's name and address will not be used for any other purpose.

Does your company use managed print services?

Question of the day!

Does your company use managed print services?


% of Computerworld UK readers agree with you


Yes
TBC
No
TBC

What benefits do you believe managed print services offer?


123 characters remaining

Follow the conversation at @Think_Print


ComputerWorldUK Resources

ComputerworldUK
Share
x
Open
* *