Green Isn't The Only Thing
I'm glad to see a conscious
develop that more people are tuning into. The green environmental movements
is a worthy effort and in line with the evolution of our civilization that
it would be expected of us to eventually learn to recycle and harmonize with
our major spaceship "Mother Earth".
Okay that is far as I need to take that. Yes, recent press releases from
vendors like VMware and IBM are also on that bandwagon about how machine
virtualization and server consolidation will reduce power and cooling costs,
free up datacenter space, etc at costs of 50% or
better.
For example, at
LinuxWorld Aug 2007 IBM announces its Big Green Linux initiative by wanting
to also consolidate 3900 of its servers to 30 z series mainframes. Even for
us, at BMC, we are also committed to virtualization on our servers and our
products:
http://www.bmc.com/products/products_services_detail/0,,0_0_48168368,00.html
However, for those that aren't motivated by "flower power", these vendors
are on the right track in terms of TCO and controlling IT costs. It too
is an evolution in datacenter management, and inevitable that more
datacenters will utilize this technology in the future as it will very much
be the mainstay of how IT is used.
How do I know this? Well for me, history is a guide. The mainframe evolved
this way as well. It was not sufficient to just partition memory and a
processor to run a task and then let it become idle until another task came
about. It soon became apparent that higher utilizations of computing
platforms as it relates to the expense to provide them challenged the
vendors and customers to engineer capacity in a meaningful way. Ah, then the
hardware eventually got cheaper due to Moore's law and everyone forgot about
these early lessons. So I stand confident that as corporations look to lower
the computing cost and other cost containment strategies that open
technologies and virtualizations are not going to be periphery items, but
instead mainstream.
I will talk more about z/VM as it facilitates z/Linux on my next post, and
yes, it too is a bit "leafy".
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