International
Virtualization Conference
& Expo faculty alumni
include such notable
speakers as: Brian
Stevens, CTO of Red Hat;
Stephen Herrod, CTO of
VMware; Vern Brownell,
founder and CEO of
Egenera; Simon Crosby,
founder and CTO of Citrix
XenSource; Hubert
Yoshida, vice president
and CTO of Hitachi Data
Systems; Jeffrey Nick,
CTO of EMC; David
Greschler, director of
Virtualization Strategy
for Microsoft; Hal Stern,
vice president and
distinguished engineer
for Sun Microsystems;
Andrew Hillier, founder
and CTO of CiRBA; Alex
Vasilevsky, founder and
CEO of Virtual Iron; Jack
Zubarev, founder and COO
of SWsoft; Stephen
Pollack, founder and CEO
of PlateSpin; Brett Adam,
founder and CEO of rPath;
Kevin Brown, founder and
CEO of Kidaro; Bob
Lozano, founder and CEO
of Appistry; and Harry
Ruda, founder and CEO of
Desktone.
International
Virtualization Conference
& Expo faculty alumni
include such notable
speakers as: Brian
Stevens, CTO of Red Hat;
Stephen Herrod, CTO of
VMware; Vern Brownell,
founder and CEO of
Egenera; Simon Crosby,
founder and CTO of Citrix
XenSource; Hubert
Yoshida, vice president
and CTO of Hitachi Data
Systems; Jeffrey Nick,
CTO of EMC; David
Greschler, director of
Virtualization Strategy
for Microsoft; Hal Stern,
vice president and
distinguished engineer
for Sun Microsystems;
Andrew Hillier, founder
and CTO of CiRBA; Alex
Vasilevsky, founder and
CEO of Virtual Iron; Jack
Zubarev, founder and COO
of SWsoft; Stephen
Pollack, founder and CEO
of PlateSpin; Brett Adam,
founder and CEO of rPath;
Kevin Brown, founder and
CEO of Kidaro; Bob
Lozano, founder and CEO
of Appistry; and Harry
Ruda, founder and CEO of
Desktone.
Virtual Cloud Computing
represents the next wave
of virtualization and
offers significant market
opportunities by
providing a new, simpler,
and much more pervasive
platform for on-demand,
desktop and application
service delivery. While
server-side
virtualization helps
enterprises optimize data
center resources, the use
of a universal dialtone
technology offers a
significantly larger
market for desktop users
in both commercial and
consumer segments. The
key to virtual cloud
computing is in the
universal dialtone which
securely links users to
desktop applications and
content resources, on
demand, via any device.
With cloud computing
becoming ever more
prevalent in the consumer
space for rapidly scaling
Web 2.0 applications,
grid computing finally
delivers similarly
efficient scalability to
the business world. Grid
computing is an
impressive, confident,
powerful technology
model, winning
high-profile admirers as
it approaches full
maturity.
By now it is conventional
wisdom to say that there
was an IBM Era of
computing, then a
Microsoft Era, and now we
are in the Google Era. In
this post, I will explain
why Microsoft was not the
'next IBM' and why Google
is not the 'next
Microsoft' - there are
significant qualitative
differences among them,
quite apart from their
status as the dominant,
era-defining players.
Understanding that
qualitative difference is
crucial for third party
vendors, like Zoho, to
thrive. I was reminded of
this because of the
IBM/Google partnership
unveiled last week. As an
aside, I have coined a
kind of Moore s Law on
these computing eras.
I/O is a key element of
server architecture, but
its virtualization is
only now starting to be
addressed. Without I/O
virtualization, the
amount, type and physical
connectivity of server
I/O are all fixed. In
order to achieve true
flexibility in server
usage, these fixed
resources must become
dynamic. This enables an
on-demand usage model for
non-virtualized servers,
including failover with
shared spares, and server
pool scaling. It is also
an important complement
to virtual machine
technology, providing
flexible dedicated I/O
pipes for virtual
machines. This
presentation will compare
different approaches to
I/O virtualization and
discuss the applications
of the technology.
As virtualization becomes
more widely deployed, and
enterprises look for new
ways to leverage this
revolutionary technology,
the consumption and
delivery of this
technology is changing.
It is no longer
one-size-fits-all and
confined to a specific
area of the data center,
but instead is
proliferating within the
data center and out to
the user via the desktop
and applications. This
session will provide IT
organizations with a
short - and long - term
roadmap by focusing on
the new delivery models
for virtualization
(including embedded
hypervisors and managed
services), what's
available today and what
can be expected in the
future, and best
practices for deployment.
From Application
Virtualization to Xen, a
round-up of the
virtualization themes &
topics being discussed in
NYC June 23-24, 2008 by
the world-class speaker
faculty at the 3rd
International
Virtualization Conference
& Expo being held by
SYS-CON Events in The
Roosevelt Hotel, in
midtown Manhattan.
The need for a way to
more effectively manage
and reduce the complexity
of end points has never
been greater. While
virtualization
technologies offer a
breakthrough approach to
reduce the complexities
of managing end points,
there are different ways
organizations are
leveraging this
technology. This session
discusses the distinct
differences between how
organizations are
approaching virtualizing
end points and the
benefits each
implementation offers for
gaining the performance,
security and control
needed to manage end
points for today's
dispersed organizations.
Does virtualization
matter? Can virtual
desktops go beyond the
sum of the virtual parts?
What is the business
value and at what price?
As server virtualization
continues to gain deeper
traction and provide
benefits beyond server
consolidation, desktop
virtualization is widely
expected to follow a
similar trajectory and
address many of the
challenges associated
with enterprise desktops.
Virtual desktops hold the
promise of increased
business agility at
reduced complexity and
cost, while providing
high fidelity user
experience at a lower
carbon footprint. How is
this promise delivered?
This session explores the
current technology
trends, business
scenarios and economic
imperatives that are
shaping the future of
virtual desktops,
enabling new delivery and
consumption models.
Open-Xchange and
Parallels are integrating
Open-Xchange open source
email and collaboration
software with Parallels
technology to deliver a
cost-effective,
enterprise-class
alternative to commercial
email and collaboration
products at a competitive
price. The products,
which will be fully
integrated with Parallels
Automation solutions,
will be offered to
end-users via hosting and
service providers.
eApps Hosting announced
that the GlassFish Open
Source Application Server
for Java EE 5, from the
GlassFish community
project, is now available
as a click installable
application service in
low cost Virtual Private
Server (VPS) hosting
plans. The eApps Hosting
service has supported
Java since 1999, when the
company's Tomcat hosting
plans were launched. In
2001 a Java hosting
service using JBoss, a
J2EE compliant Java
application server, was
offered.
Virtualization is a
no-brainer for medium to
large companies. In
today's world server
sprawl has become a major
problem and costs
companies a lot of money
not only on server
hardware, but power,
cooling, support, and
square footage.
Virtualization
potentially addresses all
those issues.
I am curious about
something - how many
organizations are using a
single physical host with
VMs across different
security zones? See, this
is something that I would
never recommend, and to
me it seems like
physically segregating
your security zones into
different virtualization
environments solves a
fair number of the
concerns about the
'dynamic data centers'
created by VMotion,
VMware DRS, and VMware
HA. Or am I overlooking a
critical aspect?
Virtualization is the
future of IT management,
but what exactly does
that mean to your
organization? CIOs around
the world recognize that
virtualization could be
the answer to combating
skyrocketing costs
associated with managing
their IT infrastructure;
however, many are still
left wondering how to
implement a long-term,
sustainable
virtualization strategy.
In this session, BMC
Software CTO, Tom Bishop,
will explain how IT
organizations can realize
the full value of
virtualization through
aligning IT with business
priorities and automating
IT processes.
Businesses that
virtualize can increase
efficiency and reduce
costs by eliminating low-
performance/low-efficienc
y servers. Less
well-known, but equally
important, is the
parallel advantage of
streamlining the legacy
power and cooling systems
that support virtualized
environments. This
presentation will discuss
how new power and cooling
technologies and
effective data center
planning and design are
saving additional
electrical costs,
sometimes even more than
the original savings from
virtualization. Learn how
to help manage the
complexities of a
virtualized environment
by answering the
not-so-obvious questions
'Where should I locate my
next server?' and 'Where
should I migrate my
applications to maximize
efficiency?'
Join us for an
interactive discussion
presented by Scalent
Systems, as we address
the big three challenges
facing server failover -
software configuration,
network connectivity and
storage access - and
contrast several
different approaches,
from traditional backup
to the use of virtual
machines, to the next
generation of
infrastructure
virtualization and
management.
The session will describe
the use of system
aggregation, a
revolutionary
virtualization technology
that allows end-users to
get access to a large
shared memory system
built using multiple
off-the-shelf x86
systems. Aggregation
provides organizations
with better
price/performance
compared to traditional
symmetric multiprocessor
(SMP) systems, and lowers
the Total Cost of
Ownership (TCO) compared
to clusters. This new
virtualization technology
for high-end computing
takes advantage of the
traditional SMP operating
model such as ease of
installation and
management, as well as
large memory, while
maintaining the cost
structure of x86
clusters.
As more and more
enterprises and ISVs seek
additional ways to
leverage virtualization
technology, virtual lab
automation (VLA) has
emerged as an innovative
solution for streamlining
software development and
automating the entire
development and test
environment setup while
utilizing existing server
virtualization
infrastructure.
Additionally, VLA
improves resource
utilization and
efficiency while pushing
products to market
faster. This presentation
will review the virtual
test and development
infrastructure and
provide best practice
recommendations for how
VLA can add significant
value to developers,
testers and IT operations
staff and help drive
business growth and
employee productivity.
How can virtualization
help transform your IT
environment into a
dynamic datacenter? In
this Virtualization
Keynote, Dr Stephen
Herrod will explore how a
virtualized IT
infrastructure gives any
organization a
sustainable competitive
advantage. We have
reached a point in time,
Herrod believes, when the
industry is shifting and
the true power of
virtualization is being
unleashed, allowing for
reduced costs, more
efficient use of
resources, increased
availability of
applications and faster
responsiveness to
business needs.
The conference theme of
the Virtualization
Conference & Expo Europe,
to be held in London,
England, January 26-27,
2009, is 'Deploying
Virtualization in the
Enterprise.' The Call for
Papers, which is now
open, welcomes
submissions from
exceptional speakers with
high-quality use cases
not only of how
virtualization maximizes
the use of resources and
thus saves companies
money, but also of how it
is fundamentally altering
the way that businesses
run IT.
As governments and
corporations intensify
their focus on reducing
energy demands and
greenhouse gas emissions,
pressure to improve data
center energy efficiency
will continue to grow. We
believe that the
following four Rs must
play an essential role in
the development of any
initiative to create a
green data center: Regain
power and cooling
capacity, Recapture
resiliency, Reduce energy
costs and Recycle
end-of-of-life equipment.
Successful organizations
will make these four Rs
their mantra. And in
doing so, their ongoing
efforts to think green
will help keep their
companies operating in
the black.
As computer grids are
becoming more wide spread
in commercial data
centers, the bottlenecks
in application
performance move from raw
processing to searching,
storing and retrieving
the data. In-Memory Data
Grid (IMDG) technology
solves this fundamental
problem by acting as
super-efficient
application accelerator,
taking advantage of
unused resources readily
available on the grid -
disk, memory, IO - to put
the data in memory of the
same computer that
performs the
calculations. The talk
will explore how IMDG can
be easily integrated with
existing enterprise grids
to create data-aware grid
applications and provide
application performance
acceleration while
improving application
scalability and
reliability.
This session will focus
on Application
Virtualization with
particular focus on
achieving Web-scale. The
session will compare and
contrast external cloud
deployment to internal
deployment on commodity
infrastructure.
Virtualization has taken
hold in the data center,
addressing some of the
most pressing issues
customers face including
excessive power and
cooling, and low server
utilization. But this is
only the first wave of
virtualization and only
addresses the server.
What's next? Enter
'Virtualization 2.0,'
where the benefits extend
from capital cost
reduction to lower
operational expenses,
improved service levels,
agility and IT
simplicity. This next
wave virtualizes beyond
the server, encompassing
data center
infrastructure (storage,
networking and
processing) to unbind
applications from servers
and create a fully agile
data center. This session
explores Virtualization
2.0 and what it will mean
for bottom line business.
There is plenty of
discussion about
virtualization, but who
does it really benefit?
How can enterprises adopt
virtualization
technologies to address
real business problems?
Is virtualization just
another consolidation
technology? How are other
businesses using
virtualization? Is there
more that it can do to
drive competitive
advantage, business
efficiency, security and
compliance? Drawing on
the industry's most
in-depth independent
research into
virtualization to date,
Andi Mann, senior analyst
from Enterprise
Management Associates,
will help you to
understand what are the
key business drivers for
virtualization, where to
expect significant
benefits and how to make
sure that virtualization
delivers strategic
advantages.
This presentation will
compare and contrast Web
application
virtualization solutions
such as WebSphere
Extended Deployment and
hardware virtualization
solutions. Particular
emphasis will be provided
on how the two solutions
can be combined to
provide the most flexible
Web application hosting
environment.
At Marathon Technologies,
we service a range of
industries that must have
their applications up and
running at all times, or
as we call it:
vAvailable. vAvailable is
the integration of
virtualization and high
availability technologies
to create a
cost-effective solution
that ensures applications
won't go down. With
virtualization
technologies, high
availability has now
launched well between
today's alternative
solutions such as
clustering. This session
will define vAvailable
and this is a huge step
between today?s
alternatives. Mr. Melnick
will discuss a new
standard for application
availability using
virtualization technology
that embraces Windows and
business process
applications.
Today, many organizations
hear the term
virtualization and still
only think of the
technology used in a
datacenter. While this
might be where
virtualization started
and has received a lot of
attention, the next wave
of virtualization is
happening in connected
devices through embedded
technologies. When
applied, virtualization
allows organizations and
developers working with
front-end connected
devices such as mobile
phones, set-top boxes and
WiMax base stations, to
experience business
benefits such as reduced
bill-of-material costs,
faster time-to-market and
richer, more functional
designs that feature
reduced power, improved
security and greater
reliability.
As a technology provider
that helps application
companies embrace cloud
computing by virtualizing
the applications to run
on any cloud, I was a bit
disappointed with
Google's appengine
announcement. It appears
that Google is embracing
the 'walled garden'
approach of
salesforce.com and
Microsoft instead of the
cloud approach of Amazon.
There has been much
speculation about the
security posture of
virtualized environments.
One identified
vulnerability is the
'hypervisor' threat in
which a hacker can break
out of a guest OS and
onto the host OS of a
server. How great a
danger is the hypervisor
threat? What security
barriers should IT erect
before and after they
implement their virtual
environment? Virtual
security expert Hezi
Moore will help attendees
separate the virtualized
wheat from the real
chaff.
The ultimate goal of
virtualization is to
increase the utilization
and efficiency of your
current infrastructure.
To that end, one should
consider virtualizing the
entire data center,
including the traditional
servers and storage, but
also bringing in
networking, cable
management, power
management,
cooling/airflow
capabilities, etc. This
allows for extreme
flexibility and agility
in terms of managing the
infrastructure to the
point of being able to
roll in and out entire
racks of equipment
without needing an
electrician to add power
outlets, without
adjusting tile placement
for airflow, without
pulling extra cable runs,
etc ... basically roll it
in, plug it in, connect
the network/FC cables,
power up and go, all
within 30-45 minutes.
Additionally, efficiency
and power savings are
very critical in the
design and architecture
phases, making sure to
provide as much power to
the IT equipment and as
little to the supporting
infrastructure as
possible. By utilizing a
management framework
based upon ITIL, and
having the proper
expertise with ISV
applications, security,
H/A and BC/DR, one can
manage these new
capabilities with greater
ease and better cost
control.
Hewlett-Packard is
supposed to be this close
to buying Electronic Data
Systems for somewhere in
the heady neighborhood of
$12 billion-$13 billion,
according to the Wall
Street Journal, a pretty
premium over its $9.5
billion market cap
Friday. The paper thinks
there could be an
announcement on Tuesday.
Buying the consultant is
meant to help HP compete
on the services side
against rival IBM.
'Virtualization is
already widely used, but
primarily for the
first-order benefit,
namely server
consolidation,' notes
Citrix CTO Simon Crosby,
in this Exclusive Q&A
with Virtualization
Journal. 'The
second-order benefits of
agility, availability and
manageability of the IT
stack are now becoming
better understood,'
Crosby continues, 'and as
a consequence
virtualization has moved
from a tactical tool for
gaining immediate
savings, to become a key
strategic theme for every
IT department.'
With a remote workforce,
either through offshoring
business processes or
remote home workers, it
is essential to keep the
data safe while providing
the most flexible
computing experience.
This session will discuss
the strategies and
pitfalls when building a
Virtual Desktop
Infrastructure (VDI). It
will discuss cost issues
and help customers build
a compelling Retrun On
Investment through
determining the Total
Cost of Ownership of a
VDI implementation. This
session will also cover
the strategic
architecture and how to
build a VDI Solution that
will allow an
Organization to reap the
benefits of a remote
workforce.
To achieve the full
potential of 'cloud
computing' we need a
broader definition of
virtualization, and that
is the complete
de-coupling of the
logical components of an
application (represented
by the software stack)
and the physical
resources. In the case of
middleware, whether it is
data access, messaging or
the business logic, the
physical location of the
resources should not
matter to the developer
and to the end user. This
is not a trivial thing to
do, especially when it
comes to data-intensive,
stateful (transactional
or otherwise)
applications and
services. In this session
we will explore the
challenges and propose a
solution, including a
live demo.
When it comes to defining
the role of
virtualization, there are
two camps: 1)
Virtualization is a
platform - represented by
VMware; 2) Virtualization
is a feature -
represented by Parallels,
Microsoft, Citrix, IBM,
SUN, Novell, Oracle.
There appear to be
basically two views on
how virtualization will
affect the future
development of operating
systems and computing
environments in the
personal computing space.
One camp believes that
virtualization
functionality will be
present within the
operating system. The
other camp believes it
will be outside the
operating system, perhaps
in the form of a
hypervisor or thin
virtualization layer that
resides 'below' the OS
and governs access to
hardware.
With the rapid deployment
of server virtualization
technology in the data
center, IT management is
actively looking at
optimizing their SAN
storage architecture to
reap the full benefits of
their virtualization
investment, such as
workload mobility and
disaster recovery,
without running into I/O
bottlenecks and
unpredictable utilization
of SAN resources that
comes with a much more
dynamic environment. This
session will explore how
Data Center Fabric
enables virtual servers
and physical servers to
stand on an equal
footing. It will also
discuss capabilities
specifically designed to
support virtualized
environments such as
VMware ESX, Microsoft
Hyper-V and Xen.
Virtualization is not a
new story; its
technologies allow
companies to meet new
business needs and say
goodbye to underutilized
hardware platforms, power
consumption, server
sprawl and spiraling IT
costs. The technology is
here and the benefits are
already proving to be
fruitful. However, these
benefits are only
possible if effective
management tools are in
place. This session will
discuss virtualization's
missing link - data
center automation - and
how organizations can use
it to create an agile,
policy-based environment
to automate and
orchestrate virtual
machine lifecycle
management. For without
proper management,
companies only have a
piece of the
virtualization puzzle.
IT groups need to be able
to consider adopting new
backup software for many
good reasons. New
software might have
features and benefits the
company needs. The curren
Unlike older spam
filters, in which the
author programs the
characteristics of spam,
statistical filtering
automatically chooses the
characteristics (or
'features')
This article is an
excerpt from Risk
Management for Computer
Security: Protecting
Your Network &
Information Assets.
Printed with permission
from Butterworth-Heinem