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Brief
Build your own vision, dont follow your vendors, suggests Gartner
In a special report research firm Gartner has predicted that virtualization
will be the highest-impact trend changing infrastructure and operations through
2012. Virtualization will transform how IT is managed, what is bought, how it
is deployed, how companies plan and how they are charged. As a result, virtualization
is creating a new wave of competition among infrastructure vendors that will
result in considerable market disruption and consolidation over the next few
years.
Virtualization is hardly a new concept; storage has already been virtualizedalbeit
primarily within the scope of individual vendor architecturesand networking
is also virtualized, said Philip Dawson, vice president and distinguished
analyst at Gartner. However, as both server and PC virtualization become
more pervasive, traditional IT infrastructure orthodoxy is being challenged
and is changing the way business works with IT.
The leading edge of this change is server virtualization, which promises to
unlock much of the underutilized capacity of existing server architectures,
says the report. Server virtualization is already having an impact on the server
market; Gartner believes that virtualization reduced the x86 server market by
4% in 2006. As hypervisor prices drop sharply and management costs decrease
because of increased competition, virtualization will have a significantly larger
impact, and Gartner analysts predict that more than four million virtual machines
will be installed on x86 servers by 2009.
The use of PC virtualization is also set to increase rapidly. The number of
virtualized PCs is expected to grow from less than five million in 2007 to 660
million by 2011. On the PC, the decoupling technology that breaks the close
ties and dependencies between hardware and software occurs at two levels: between
hardware and the operating system (machine virtualization) and between the operating
system and applications (application virtualization).
Although application virtualization is gaining considerable interest, Gartner
maintains that it is machine virtualization that will have a more-long-term
impact, making personal computing more manageable, flexible and secure by allowing
multiple individual footprints to be defined on the same device.
Essentially, virtualization creates a fork in the road for operating systems,
said Thomas Bittman, vice president and distinguished analyst at Gartner. Traditionally
the operating system has been the center of gravity for client and server computing,
but new technologies, new modes of computing, and infrastructure virtualization
and automation are changing the architecture and role of the operating system.
The days of the monolithic, general-purpose operating system will soon be over.
Infrastructure vendors that have always vied for the largest share of budgets
on a best-of breed basis must alter their approach. In the future, the virtualization
and automation of infrastructure will be managed by policies at a business-service
level, requiring all parts of the infrastructure to work in harmony. This concerns
some vendors, which believe a smooth-running and standardized infrastructure
threatens to commoditize their component parts and are keen to establish a critical
linchpin status in the market.
This competition will play itself out in the market and in users
infrastructure, and it will be messy, said Dawson. Eventually a
few dominant infrastructure control architectures will emerge, and in those
architectures, vendors will solidify a span on control in a hierarchy of governance.
As a result of the uncertainty that will prevail over the market in the short-to-medium
term, Bittman advised against following a specific vendors vision and
instead advised users to determine their own vision of architecture control
and build toward it with a constantly updated strategic plan. In the medium
term, align your virtualization strategy with the business, avoid vendor hype
and beware of software pricing and licensing, he said. Be prepared
to experiment, but make sure that you are the scientist, not the subject.
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