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Research and Markets Releases New Report on Virtualization Security

October 7, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

Research and Markets has announced the addition of the “Virtualization Security: The Early Stages of a New Battleground” report to their offering. Here’s the run-down they’ve provided via press release:

With the rush to adopt virtual technologies, the security of virtualization has become a primary concern – yet few understand the security implications of this disruptive innovation. In this report, EMA provides guidance for IT practitioners seeking to secure their virtual environments. With a simple, five-phase approach to virtualization security as the centerpiece of this study, EMA takes an initial look at virtualization threats and vulnerabilities, and considers the security benefits of virtualization. Market insight from EMA’s 2008 virtualization survey of over 600 enterprises takes a sampling of the steps organizations are – and are not – taking today to secure virtual environments. Until virtualized security measures mature, this report focuses on what enterprises can do today to secure virtualization and seize the unique opportunity to integrate security early in the adoption of this game-changing technology – before it’s too late.

The rapid adoption of virtualization technology has created multiple benefits for IT organizations. Advantages such as the reduction of cost through more efficient resource utilization are obvious; however, these benefits can quickly be negated if virtualization opens a door to a major security incident.
Many researchers have argued about the security implications of a migration towards IT virtualization. Some say that virtual solutions increase the risks faced by an organization, others argue that there is no impact at all, while still others argue that the implementation of virtualization allows organizations to actually reduce risk. The reality is that virtualization can do all of these, depending on the way it is designed, implemented and used. It is therefore imperative that IT managers have a high-level understanding of the security issues that can affect their virtual environments, and of the approaches that can address those issues. Through this understanding, enterprises can ensure that the delicate balance between functionality and security results in the greatest business benefit with the fewest risks. Moreover, executives can assure that their organizations take advantage of the opportunity that virtualization offers to put security at the forefront and thus avoid future security issues and costs.

In this report, an initial look at the emerging challenge of securing virtualization, as well the security benefits of this disruptive technology. The reader will be presented with an introductory view of threats and vulnerabilities affecting virtual environments, as well as recommendations for pursuing a simple five-phase process that can be tailored to any environment in order to implement virtual solutions in a secure manner. Through infrastructure consolidation strategy and design, administrative process management, network strategy and design in extending the layered security model, configuration management, and risk assessment, this five-phase approach addresses specific virtualization security risks in order to strengthen both the security and operational benefits virtualization offers the business.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: research, Research and Markets, research report, virtsec, virtualisation, virtualisation security, virtualization, virtualization security, Virtualization Security: The Early Stages of a New Batt

Evergrid Rebrands To Librato, Releases Load Manager 2.0

October 7, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

Evergrid recently announced the company changed its name to Librato. The new name encompasses the expanded scope of the company’s product offerings which now includes application workload
management in addition to grid computing products.

Founded in 2005, Librato first developed a unique technology for lightweight, transparent checkpoint/restart and migration capabilities, for high performance grid computing environments. This technology required detailed knowledge of application structure and state. Leveraging this core technology and expertise, Librato expanded its product portfolio by adding an application workload management solution, Load Manager.

Yesterday, the company Librato released (PDF) Load Manager 2.0. The company claims Librato Load Manager is the only technology on the market to offer heterogeneous application workload management in x86 environments, and require no application or operating system modification. Load Manager enables more applications to run on fewer servers whether the infrastructure is physical, virtual or both. The new release adds support for Windows Server 2003 and 2008 environments, and delivers new demand monitoring capabilities which provides users with a comprehensive view of application resource requirements for more accurate capacity planning.

Load Manager 2.0 broadens the product’s initial platform support for Linux to now include Windows Server 2003 and 2008. The new demand monitoring capability provides an advanced level of capacity planning that was unattainable until now. In addition to allocating system resources to an application and measuring actual resource consumption (load) over time, Load Manager can now also be used to project how much resource an application would have consumed (demand) had it not been limited by its allocation. This ability to determine the difference between load and demand provides IT organizations with a powerful tool for planning server capacity – enabling them to better meet application SLAs.

Load Manager 2.0 will be available December 1, 2008.

EverGrid

Filed Under: News Tagged With: application workload management, Evergrid, heterogeneous application workload management, Librato, Librato Load Manager, Librato Load Manager 2.0, Load Manager, Load Manager 2.0, virtualisation, virtualization

CA Wants A Piece Of The Virtualization Pie, Upgrades Data Center Automation Manager

October 7, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

CA today announced a group of products aimed squarely at the new-world data center and its growing ranks of virtual machines. With today’s announcement, CA debuts Data Center Automation Manager 11.2, plus nine tools aimed at infrastructure, application performance and service management, as well as information governance.

CA’s Data Center Automation Manager tool seeks to minimize the amount of time IT spends caring for virtual machines, while improving agility and efficiency. It includes elements such as a rules-based policy engine and the ability to analyze performance measures and configuration details from apps and systems, while integrating with other CA tools including CA AutoSys Workload Automation, CA NSM, CA Service Desk, and CA Wily Introscope. The new products will all be available within a few weeks.

VMware, no stranger to the fact that customers want to use management tools from multiple vendors, introduced its plans for a Data Center OS at VMworld last month. The company envisions this OS as a layer into which other tools vendors can plug, using APIs.

HP takes a similar approach to CA’s, not making hypervisor technology itself like VMware or Microsoft, but offering hardware that makes sense for highly-virtualized data centers, as well as already-known management tools that can pull data from virtualized environments as well as physical ones. HP, with its acquisition of EDS also has a large services organization to help customers with virtualization projects.

Filed Under: Featured, News Tagged With: CA, CA AutoSys Workload Automation, CA NSM, CA Service Desk, CA virtualization, CA Wily Introscope, Computer Associates, Data Center Automation Manager, Data Center Automation Manager 11.2, HP, virtualisation, virtualization, vmware

Enomaly Unveils Elastic Computing Platform After Years of R&D

October 7, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

Enomaly today announced Enomaly Elastic Computing Platform (ECP), after having released an Alpha version in March of this year. ECP is an open source, programmable, cloud computing infrastructure for businesses looking to design, deploy and manage virtual applications in the cloud. With its official product launch, Enomaly is shifting its business from a services organization to a software products and support company.

Enomaly’s ECP is designed to work alongside a company’s existing virtual data center providing time and money savings. An intuitive, browser-based dashboard makes it easy for IT personnel to efficiently plan deployments, automate VM scaling and load-balancing; and, analyze, configure and optimize cloud capacity.

The Enomaly ECP is available for immediate download. Proprietary enterprise licenses of the software are available. With the release of the Enomaly ECP, the company is offering paid Web-based and phone support packages. The three plans are: Silver — Web-based support for up to 25 incidents per year; Gold — Phone and Web-based support for up to 50 incidents per year; and Platinum — Phone and Web-based support for up to 100 incidents per year plus assistance and advice with cluster architecture and virtual machine and application design.

Filed Under: Featured, News Tagged With: cloud computing, ECP, Elastic Computing, Enomalism, Enomalism Elastic Computing Platform, Enomaly, Enomaly ECP, Enomaly Elastic Computing Platform, open source, virtualisation, virtualization

Industry Moves: Kathryn Rose Joins Hyperic As CFO, Ron Oglesby Leaves Glasshouse for Dell

October 7, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

Open source web infrastructure management provider Hyperic (earlier coverage) today announced it has named Kathryn Rose as chief financial officer (CFO). In this newly created position, Rose will be responsible for the company’s financial operations plan as well as being part of the executive team that sets strategic direction.

Rose brings nearly 20 years expertise in financial management and capital markets at both large public companies and smaller, privately held startups—much of that in the tech sector—to Hyperic. Her CFO-level roles include successful tenures at global consumer products company Leapfrog as well as at Autodesk, Sage Systems and Foresight Energy Company. She has also held high-level financial positions at Merrill Lynch and Chevron. Rose’s work ranges from raising $200 million in venture capital, to tight integration of financial and strategic functions across global enterprises to increase profitability.

Rose holds an MBA in finance from the University of California at Berkeley, and a BA from the University of Texas, Austin.

Glasshouse Technologies has lost its Director of Virtualization and Architecture Services, Ron Oglesby, after just one year. Oglesby co-authored two best seller books about VMware Infrastructure: VMware ESX Server: Advanced Technical Design Guide and VMware Infrastructure 3: Advanced Technical Design Guide and Advanced Operations Guide. Rumor has it Oglesby was hired by Dell.

Filed Under: People Tagged With: CFO, Dell, Glasshouse, Glasshouse Technologies, Hyperic, industry moves, Kathryn Rose, Ron Oglesby, virtualisation, virtualization

Wachovia Analyst Downgrades Ratings for VMware (VMW)

October 6, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

Wachovia’s Philip Rueppel this morning was the latest analyst to take a machete to his EPS estimates for the software sector, reducing numbers for most of the companies he follows.

“We are reducing estimats for a majority of companies in our universe, as we believe typical Q4 budget-flush will be muted this year, and growth prospects for new licenses next year will be muted,” he writes.

As part of his call, Rueppel downgrades his ratings on VMware (VMW) to Market Perform from Outperform, asserting that the company has “particularly acute issues due to their customer base segmentation, and/or growth expectations.”

In today’s trading VMware is down 67 cents, or 3%, to $21.90.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: market perform, Phil Rueppel, Philip Rueppel, stock, stock market, virtualisation, virtualization, VMW, vmware, Wachovia

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