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Search Results for: virtualization security

Interphase Systems Wants Lew Smith To Grow Virtualization Business

July 22, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

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Management and technology consulting company Interphase Systems today announced it has named Lew Smith as Product Manager, Virtualization Solutions. In this newly created position, he will be responsible for building Interphase’s virtualization practice and offerings. Smith will continue to build relationships with existing technology partners, as well as engaging in new partner relationships.

Smith comes to Interphase Systems with 11 years of experience working with large enterprise companies in the areas of IT project management and large-scale application management. Most recently, he served as a senior project manager at Advanced Automation, a manufacturing systems integrator, where he managed multiple million dollar projects within the food, beverage, and pharmaceutical industries.
Lew Smith holds a Bachelor of Arts degree from Elon College in Elon, NC. He currently lives in Kennett Square, PA.
“Virtualization is our fastest growing practice area and we had the need for a dedicated Product Manager with the expertise and experience to lead this part of our business,” said John Biglin, CEO of Interphase Systems. “We are thrilled to have Smith join us at this important time to help expand our growing virtualization practice nationwide and bring businesses a solution that will save them time, money, and energy, while also providing increased security and disaster recovery capability.”
[Source: Marketwatch]

Filed Under: News, People Tagged With: Advanced Automation, Interphase, Interphase Systems, John Biglin, Lew Smith, virtualisation, virtualization

VirtualLogix Invents “Carrier Grade Virtualization”

July 21, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

VirtualLogix today announced something called “Carrier Grade Virtualization”, which it claims is the industry’s first solution that meets the performance, security, serviceability and availability needs of next generation, multicore-based carrier grade systems.

VirtualLogix says Carrier Grade Virtualization reduces the cost and complexity of maintaining carrier grade properties in edge and core network elements such as IP Multimedia System (IMS) nodes. According to the news release, networking and telecommunication OEMs can reuse existing investments in their carrier grade systems while gaining the benefits of using VirtualLogix VLX real-time virtualization software (faster adoption of multicore architectures and consolidation of hardware, reduced bill of materials, increased availability, improved time to market, and more efficient designs as a result).

VirtualLogix Carrier Grade Virtualization technology integrates High-Availability software with real-time virtualization in a multicore environment, and allows HA middleware to manage not only applications and hardware but also virtual machines running their own operating systems.

VirtualLogix also announced they are joining the Service Availability Forum.

VirtualLogix Carrier Grade Virtualization technology is immediately available and integrates VLX for Network Infrastructure, vHA, a virtualization enabled HA interface, and VLX Developer, a set of configuration, building and monitoring tools.

[Source: Business Wire]

VirtualLogix

Filed Under: News Tagged With: carrier grade, carrier grade systems, carrier-grade virtualization, HA, high availability, real-time virtualization, vHA, virtualisation, virtualization, VirtualLogix, VirtualLogix Carrier Grade Virtualization, VirtualLogix VLX, VirtualLogix VLX Developer, VirtualLogix VLX for Network Architecture, VLX Developer, VLX for Network Architecture

Cisco’s John McCool Talks Virtualization

July 11, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

NetworkWorld published a great interview yesterday with John McCool, senior VP of data center, switching and security at Cisco. McCool sees a great future for virtualization around the company’s most successful product in its entire history, the Catalyst 6500 (and its successor, the Nexus 7000 Series, which was recently unveiled), combined with its own forray into virtualizing the data center with its Data Center 3.0 initiative.

A small excerpt:

What other areas are investment priorities?

Virtualizing services in the branch by centralizing those services in the data center. That’s a trend that’s here to stay. [Application Control Engine] and applications embedded into the network infrastructure would be another area that we’ll continue to drive very heavily.

Do you plan to take virtualization above the network to the server or application level?

You see a component of that already in Unified I/O. So the I/O component, really virtualizing that over a single connection to the network, is very fundamental. And then being able to split that out further in the networking device. That’s getting ingrained in the architecture of the data center, very much touching the connection to the server itself.

Do you plan to invest in another hypervisor vendor, similar to your relationship with VMware?

No announcements to date. We’re continuing to work with all the hypervisor vendors. We are interested in virtualized data centers and to the extent that hypervisor and virtualized servers exist in the data center we think that’s a very powerful construct for customers and one that’s going to take network support.

Read the rest of the interview here.

[Source: Cisco Blogs]

Cisco Systems

Filed Under: Interviews, People Tagged With: Catalyst 6500, Cisco, Cisco Catalyst 6500, Cisco Data Center 3.0, Cisco Nexus 7000 Series, Cisco Systems, Cisco Unified I/O, Cisco virtualization, Data Center 3.0, John McCool, network virtualization, Nexus, Nexus 7000, Nexus 7000 Series, Unified I/O, virtualisation, virtualization, virtualized data center

David Coyle, Gartner Researcher: The 7 Side Effects Of Lousy Virtualization

June 24, 2008 by Robin Wauters Leave a Comment

David Coyle, research VP at Gartner, detailed the seven side effects at the research firm’s Infrastructure, Operations and Management Summit, which drew nearly 900 attendees. While virtualization promises to solve issues such as underutilization, high hardware costs and poor system availability, the benefits come only when the technology is applied with proper care and consistently monitored for change, Coyle explained.

Here are the reasons Gartner says virtualization is no IT cure-all:

1. Magnified failures. In the physical world, a server hardware failure typically would mean one server failed and backup servers would step in to prevent downtime. In the virtual world, depending on the number of virtual machines residing on a physical box, a hardware failure could impact multiple virtual servers and the applications they host

2. Degraded performance. Companies looking to ensure top performance of critical applications often dedicate server, network and storage resources for those applications, segmenting them from other traffic to ensure they get the resources they need. With virtualization, sharing resources that can be automatically allocated on demand is the goal in a dynamic environment. At any given time, performance of an application could degrade, perhaps not to a failure, but slower than desired.

3. Obsolete skills. IT might not realize the skill sets it has in-house won’t apply to a large virtualized production environment until they have it live. The skills needed to manage virtual environments should span all levels of support, including service desk operators who may be fielding calls regarding their virtual PCs. Companies will feel a bit of a talent shortage when moving toward more virtualized systems, and Coyle recommends starting the training now.

4. Complex root cause analysis. Virtual machines move — that is the part of their appeal. But as Coyle pointed out, it is also a potential issue when managing problems. Server problems in the past could be limited to one box, but now the problem can move with the virtual machine and lull IT staff into a false sense of security.

5. No standardization. Tools and processes used to address the physical environment can’t be directly applied to the virtual world, so many IT shops will have to think about standardizing how they address issues in the virtual environment.

6. Virtual machine sprawl. The most documented side effect to date, virtual server sprawl results from the combination of ease of deployment and lack of life-cycle management of virtual machines. The issue could cause consolidation efforts to go awry when more virtual machines crop up than there are server administrators to manage them.

7. May be habit forming. Once IT organizations start to use virtualization, they can’t stop themselves, Coyle said. He offered tips to help curb the damage done from giving into a virtual addition.

[In large part thanks to NetworkWorld]

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: David Coyle, gartner, Gartner Infrastructure Operations and Management Summit, Infrastructure Operations and Management Summit, research, side effects, virtualisation, virtualization

Embotics Releases V-Commander 2.0, Aims To Simplify Virtualization Lifecycle Management

June 23, 2008 by Robin Wauters 1 Comment

Embotics, which bills itself as a “Virtualization Lifecycle Management Company”, today released V-Commander 2.0 at the Gartner IT Infrastructure, Operations and Management Summit 2008.

Embotics

The new version of V-Commander reduces risks and costs by preventing virtual sprawl, automating lifecycle management and extending management systems for enterprise CIOs, CSOs, IT operations staff and security professionals. Learn more about the product in our video interviews with Jean-Marc Seguin, Chief Architect with Embotics (we’ve embedded the clip below) and the company’s founder and CEO, Jay Litkey.

V-Commander 2.0 aims to simplify virtual machine (VM) management within IT environments. Its features include:

  • Expanded Policy Capabilities – Increased capacity for new policies enables expanded zones and VM grouping, as well as additional policy actions for the different stages of the VM lifecycle.
  • Improved Reporting Capabilities – Facilitates unlimited custom reporting as well as task oriented reports that identify costs associated with expired, offline and unauthorized VMs.
  • Additional Enterprise Features – Provides easier installation and configuration workflow by enabling automatic VM identification tagging and the ability to associate and assign policies to groups as opposed to individual VMs.

[Source: BusinessWire]

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Embotics, Embotics V-Commander, Embotics V-Commander 2.0, gartner, Gartner IT Infrastructure, Jay Litkey, Jean-Marc Seguin, Operations and Management Summit 2008, V-Commander, V-Commander 2.0, virtual machine management, virtualisation, virtualization, Virtualization LifeCycle Management, virtualization management, vm management

Introducing The Virtualization.com Job Board

June 23, 2008 by Robin Wauters 5 Comments

Just a quick announcement to let you know the Virtualization.com Job Board is now up and running. For only $160, you can post a job offer which will be published on the board for 30 days. This offer provides you with the best possible return on your recruitment investment by targetting your open positions to the core audience instead of trying to hit a fly with a cannon.

Virtualization.com reaches thousands of professionals from the virtualization industry on a daily basis, from developers, engineers, system administrators, security officers and programmers to product, marketing & general management. Stop searching for the right candidates to fill your virtualization positions and start finding them!

Every two weeks, we’ll post published job offers in an article under the category ‘Jobs’, which will also be sent out to our e-mail newsletter subscribers. The 5 latest jobs will also be featured in the homepage sidebar.

For job seekers, the job board features a handy way of filtering outstanding job offers by occupation (consulting, development, marketing, etc.) and type (full-time, part-time, internship, etc.). Should there be no results for your query, the application will show jobs from other recruitment websites and portals, if available. The job board comes with a dedicated RSS feed you can subscribe to in your favorite feed reader.

The job board is powered by Job-A-Matic, a SimplyHired service.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: career, careers, job, Jobs, recruitment, virtualisation, virtualisation jobs, virtualization, virtualization industry, virtualization jobs

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