Virtualization: Expect Technology to Cross the Chasm Within Two Years [View article]
More idiotic blather from a wanna be Cisco acquisition. Motion is a small part of the issue. Sprawl is THE issue. Think 10000 servers are a challenge to manage? 1000 switches and routers got you swimming in log data? Try wrangling 80000 VMs on the same network. Current tools have not even scratched the surface of being able to handle how this much stuff gets managed. The VLAN is not the problem, the stuff riding on it is going the be a Tsunami...
or... the hardware becomes a comoditized compute bedrock of low cost servers and switches rented from a datacenter in central Texas and the software now demands the lions share of Capex as it does what you just described.
Will Virtualization Undermine Network Equipment Vendors? [View article]
Comparing VOIP's impact on the network to Virtualization is not valid. VOIP put new, real time stresses on the network. Virtualization removes them from the LAN and puts them potentially on the WAN. The idea that there will be a valid use case for moving a VM across a wide distance is goofy (much less a running VM). Data will move the, VMs will stay where they are. Taking advantage of cheaper compute resources elsewhere will mean getting a COPY of a VM to materialize at the lowest cost facility and the data there to use it. One won't move a VM but rather a description of it, a formula of how to construct it and the data it needs to do it's job.
The Tipping Point for Network Automation [View article]
What this means of course is that automation at the network layer is done before it gets started as the cloud provider will do that with his labor costs baked into the price of a VM. The next big thing will be automating the care an feeding of a vast sea of VMs. Fortunately the technology lends itself to this. It will be the small virtual data center and data center automation vendors who take the day here.
The Coming Cloud Computing Dogfight: Google vs. Microsoft [View article]
This misinformed article proves the gross misunderstanding of Cloud Computing at this stage of it's development! The battle is not goog vs msft it's goog vs amazon. msft is well behind (once again) while goog has missed the boat in terms of understanding what cloud developers really want and need. My bet is on Amazon to walk away with this one until the likes of IBM and HP enter the market with more polished versions of the cloud.
Virtualization: Expect Technology to Cross the Chasm Within Two Years [View article]
Cambrian Cloud Explosions Coming [View article]
Will Virtualization Undermine Network Equipment Vendors? [View article]
One won't move a VM but rather a description of it, a formula of how to construct it and the data it needs to do it's job.
The Tipping Point for Network Automation [View article]
Cloud Wars Are on the Horizon [View article]
The Coming Cloud Computing Dogfight: Google vs. Microsoft [View article]