Next Generation Data Center - IT TransformationDamian Hamilton
Computerworld CIO Event in Hong Kong sponsored by Dimension Data, EMC & Cisco.
Insights into Dimension Data's DC strategy and recent Client engagements
Next Generation Data Centre - IDC InfravisionDamian Hamilton
Recent Presentation made at IDC Infravision in Indonesia, discussing the emerging world of a Hybrid DC - one that has traditional DC components and a blend of cloud services.
Some client scenarios and case studies and thoughts around Active-Active DC, Right-sourcing Workloads in a Next Generation DC & building a Green DC Facility
Cloud Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) model is gaining traction among businesses.The advent of more powerful, streamlined and cost-effective cloud-enabled services is fueling this migration process by giving organizations another infrastructure management alternative.
Keine Angst vorm Dinosaurier: Mainframe-Integration und -Offloading mit Confl...Precisely
Mainframes sind immer noch weit verbreitet im Einsatz und verarbeiten täglich über 70 Prozent der wichtigsten Rechentransaktionen der Welt. Sehr hohe Kosten, monolithische Architekturen und fehlende Experten sind die größten Herausforderungen für Mainframe-Anwendungen. Es ist an der Zeit, innovativer zu werden, auch mit dem Mainframe! Stellen wir uns gemeinsam dem Dinosaurier!
Mainframe Offloading mit Confluent, Apache Kafka und dem zugehörigen Ökosystem kann genutzt werden, um moderne Dateninfrastrukturen in Echtzeit mit dem Mainframe synchron zu halten. Dabei ermöglich Kafka sowohl die Datenverarbeitung als auch die Integration mit Systemen wie Data Warehouses und Analytics-Plattformen. Dabei können via Change Data Capture (CDC) permanent Mainframe-Änderungen im hochvoluminösen Bereich nach Kafka gepusht werden.
In dieser on-demand-präsentation zeigen Confluent und Precisely, wie Unternehmen diesen Schritt zur Legacy-Migration machen, Kosten sparen, eine skalierbare und offene Architektur schaffen und so neue Dienste und Anwendungen ermöglichen.
Next Generation Data Center - IT TransformationDamian Hamilton
Computerworld CIO Event in Hong Kong sponsored by Dimension Data, EMC & Cisco.
Insights into Dimension Data's DC strategy and recent Client engagements
Next Generation Data Centre - IDC InfravisionDamian Hamilton
Recent Presentation made at IDC Infravision in Indonesia, discussing the emerging world of a Hybrid DC - one that has traditional DC components and a blend of cloud services.
Some client scenarios and case studies and thoughts around Active-Active DC, Right-sourcing Workloads in a Next Generation DC & building a Green DC Facility
Cloud Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) model is gaining traction among businesses.The advent of more powerful, streamlined and cost-effective cloud-enabled services is fueling this migration process by giving organizations another infrastructure management alternative.
Keine Angst vorm Dinosaurier: Mainframe-Integration und -Offloading mit Confl...Precisely
Mainframes sind immer noch weit verbreitet im Einsatz und verarbeiten täglich über 70 Prozent der wichtigsten Rechentransaktionen der Welt. Sehr hohe Kosten, monolithische Architekturen und fehlende Experten sind die größten Herausforderungen für Mainframe-Anwendungen. Es ist an der Zeit, innovativer zu werden, auch mit dem Mainframe! Stellen wir uns gemeinsam dem Dinosaurier!
Mainframe Offloading mit Confluent, Apache Kafka und dem zugehörigen Ökosystem kann genutzt werden, um moderne Dateninfrastrukturen in Echtzeit mit dem Mainframe synchron zu halten. Dabei ermöglich Kafka sowohl die Datenverarbeitung als auch die Integration mit Systemen wie Data Warehouses und Analytics-Plattformen. Dabei können via Change Data Capture (CDC) permanent Mainframe-Änderungen im hochvoluminösen Bereich nach Kafka gepusht werden.
In dieser on-demand-präsentation zeigen Confluent und Precisely, wie Unternehmen diesen Schritt zur Legacy-Migration machen, Kosten sparen, eine skalierbare und offene Architektur schaffen und so neue Dienste und Anwendungen ermöglichen.
From the Amazon Web Services Singapore & Malaysia Summits 2015 Track 1 Breakout, 'The Journey to Digital Enterprise' Presented by Daniel Angelucci, CTO, CSC AMEA
Building the Next Generation IoT & Telematics PlatformCloudera, Inc.
IoT is fundamentally revolutionizing the automotive insurance space, by enabling insurers to gain powerful insights into the behavior, risk, and habits of individual drivers.
With over 180 Billion miles of driving data analyzed from connected cars, Octo Telematics has emerged as the leading global provider of telematics and data analytics solutions for the auto insurance industry.
Join Cloudera, Ovum and Octo Telematics for a joint webinar to learn more about how Octo built their next generation IoT & Telematics platform. In this session, Jonathan, the Global Chief Marketing Officer of Octo will share their transformational journey into how they are building the world’s largest insurance telematics database powered by analytics and machine learning.
As part of this webinar you can learn more about:
Octo’s transformation to the Next Generation Platform (NGP) for Telematics & IoT
How they process and analyze data from 5.4 million connected cars every day
How Octo implemented the data management and analytics infrastructure
How they are using machine learning to analyze risks and driving behavior
3 things to learn:
Octo’s transformation to the Next Generation Platform (NGP) for Telematics & IoT
How they process and analyze data from 5.4 million connected cars every day
How Octo implemented the data management and analytics infrastructure
To prosper in this new environment insurance companies can look to the cloud, in conjunction with other technologies, to help drive reinvention of their business model to offer new services and create direct, multi-channel relationships with customers
DELL EMC: IT transformation & the impact on the datacenterMarketing Team
In het huidige economische klimaat staan innovatie, flexibiliteit en klantenbinding centraal. Hoe blijf je als bedrijf relevant in deze snel veranderende wereld, hoe kan de informaticadienst aan de basis staan van meer efficiente processen en nieuwe bronnen van inkomsten en welke rol speelt het datacenter in deze evolutie? Een sessie rond digitale transformatie voor kleine en middelgrote bedrijven.
Even as enterprise IT shops are deploying private clouds to increase agility and reduce costs, they are also increasing the number of workloads being run in public clouds in order to meet the dynamic needs of the business. This means that the role of “cloud broker” is now part of the CIO’s strategic posture as a partner with the business.
Come integrare strategia, innovazione e futuro - Future Value Generation de @...Daniel Egger
Le slide che seguono sono una sintesi del Future Value Generation Framework, parte del libro “Future Value Generation”.
Nei prossimi mesi condividerò ulteriori logiche, idee e concetti. Inoltre, il nostro team sta lavorando intensamente per attivare il portale www.fvg.coomunity, un hub per supportare coloro i quali vorranno implementare il modello, condividere le proprie esperienze e spunti pratici, nonché nuovi template. Vi aspettiamo!
Training Slides of Strategic Management Course, discussing how leadership should taken plan in strategic planning & management to enhance sustainability development of a company.
Some keypoints:
- Strategic Management Process
- Effective Communication
- Highly Effective Leaders & Managers
For further information regarding the course, please contact:
info@asia-masters.com
From the Amazon Web Services Singapore & Malaysia Summits 2015 Track 1 Breakout, 'The Journey to Digital Enterprise' Presented by Daniel Angelucci, CTO, CSC AMEA
Building the Next Generation IoT & Telematics PlatformCloudera, Inc.
IoT is fundamentally revolutionizing the automotive insurance space, by enabling insurers to gain powerful insights into the behavior, risk, and habits of individual drivers.
With over 180 Billion miles of driving data analyzed from connected cars, Octo Telematics has emerged as the leading global provider of telematics and data analytics solutions for the auto insurance industry.
Join Cloudera, Ovum and Octo Telematics for a joint webinar to learn more about how Octo built their next generation IoT & Telematics platform. In this session, Jonathan, the Global Chief Marketing Officer of Octo will share their transformational journey into how they are building the world’s largest insurance telematics database powered by analytics and machine learning.
As part of this webinar you can learn more about:
Octo’s transformation to the Next Generation Platform (NGP) for Telematics & IoT
How they process and analyze data from 5.4 million connected cars every day
How Octo implemented the data management and analytics infrastructure
How they are using machine learning to analyze risks and driving behavior
3 things to learn:
Octo’s transformation to the Next Generation Platform (NGP) for Telematics & IoT
How they process and analyze data from 5.4 million connected cars every day
How Octo implemented the data management and analytics infrastructure
To prosper in this new environment insurance companies can look to the cloud, in conjunction with other technologies, to help drive reinvention of their business model to offer new services and create direct, multi-channel relationships with customers
DELL EMC: IT transformation & the impact on the datacenterMarketing Team
In het huidige economische klimaat staan innovatie, flexibiliteit en klantenbinding centraal. Hoe blijf je als bedrijf relevant in deze snel veranderende wereld, hoe kan de informaticadienst aan de basis staan van meer efficiente processen en nieuwe bronnen van inkomsten en welke rol speelt het datacenter in deze evolutie? Een sessie rond digitale transformatie voor kleine en middelgrote bedrijven.
Even as enterprise IT shops are deploying private clouds to increase agility and reduce costs, they are also increasing the number of workloads being run in public clouds in order to meet the dynamic needs of the business. This means that the role of “cloud broker” is now part of the CIO’s strategic posture as a partner with the business.
Come integrare strategia, innovazione e futuro - Future Value Generation de @...Daniel Egger
Le slide che seguono sono una sintesi del Future Value Generation Framework, parte del libro “Future Value Generation”.
Nei prossimi mesi condividerò ulteriori logiche, idee e concetti. Inoltre, il nostro team sta lavorando intensamente per attivare il portale www.fvg.coomunity, un hub per supportare coloro i quali vorranno implementare il modello, condividere le proprie esperienze e spunti pratici, nonché nuovi template. Vi aspettiamo!
Training Slides of Strategic Management Course, discussing how leadership should taken plan in strategic planning & management to enhance sustainability development of a company.
Some keypoints:
- Strategic Management Process
- Effective Communication
- Highly Effective Leaders & Managers
For further information regarding the course, please contact:
info@asia-masters.com
Security, Identity, and DevOps, oh my - PrintChris Sanchez
My talk from All Day DevOps 2016 introducing IdentityOps. IdentityOps is a set of strategies that integrates security, Identity and DevOps to solve common use cases for technical operations.
Key take aways of IdentityOps:
* Centralized policy for access management to resources
* Uniform application of policy and real-time enforcement
* Better operational efficiency
* Enable use cases: least privilege, nonrepudiation, segregation of duties, and audibility
Gartner: Top 10 Strategic Technology Trends 2016Den Reymer
Digital Transformation and Innovation on http://denreymer.com
- Which trends will drive the greatest disruption to the IT landscape over the next three years
- Critical technologies that must be explored to support the move to digital business
- How these trends and technologies are evolving and actions to take today
http://www.gartner.com//it/content/3154000/3154017/december_8_top_strategic_technology_trends_dcearley.pdf
Gartner TOP 10 Strategic Technology Trends 2017Den Reymer
Gartner TOP 10 Strategic Technology Trends_2017
http://denreymer.com
Artificial Intelligence and Advanced Machine Learning
Intelligent Apps
Intelligent Things
Virtual Reality and Augmented Reality
Digital Twins
Blockchains and Distributed Ledgers
Conversational Systems
Digital Technology Platforms
Mesh App and Service Architecture
Adaptive Security Architecture
The data center impact of cloud, analytics, mobile, social and security rlw03...Diego Alberto Tamayo
Introduction
The consumerization of IT continues to have a major impact
on business. Technology forces have emerged that are
challenging organizations’ ability to respond. Cloud computing,
mobility, social business, big data and analytics and IT security
technologies are evolving very rapidly, putting an organization’s
IT agility, speed and resilience to the test. As these technologies
mature and converge, they are demanding a total reexamination
of the underlying enterprise infrastructure: its strategy and
design, its operation and its management framework.
Netmagic solutions, leading IT Managed service provider with Data centers & Cloud Computing in India fulfills your entire IT infrastructure requirements: from collocation services to dedicated hosting, diaster recovery & data Storage solutions.
The Future of Data Center Engineering Trends and Innovations.pdfIDCA
In today's fast-paced digital landscape, data centers play a pivotal role in supporting the growing demands of businesses and consumers. As technology evolves, so does the field of data center engineering. This blog explores the key trends and innovations shaping the future of data center engineering.
Learn how to Build a Smarter Data Center with Juniper Networks Qfabric. This IBM Redguide publication highlights the key requirements for a smarter data center and shows how the characteristics of the data center fabric, a new switching architecture, provide the performance, scalability, flexibility, and manageability that is required. For more information on SAP HANA, visit http://ibm.co/1brCGOt.
Visit http://on.fb.me/LT4gdu to 'Like' the official Facebook page of IBM India Smarter Computing.
The cumulative effect of decades of IT infrastructure investment around a diverse set of technologies and processes has stifled innovation at organizations around the globe. Layer upon layer of complexity to accommodate a staggering array of applications has created hardened processes that make changes to systems difficult and cumbersome.
With 2017 upon us, now is a decent time as any to investigate the new advancements that will be forming the data center industry for quite a long time to come. Investigate what driving analysts and specialists say in regards to the best rising patterns, including the move far from corporate server farms and advancing employment requests.
Unleashing Power_ A Deep Dive into the Benefits of Server-Based Computing.pdfGet2 knowit
In the ever-evolving scene of IT arrangements, Server-Based Computing rises as a powerhouse, changing the way businesses work and the people associated with innovation. This comprehensive guide dives into the profundities of Server-Based Computing, investigating its benefits, applications, and the significant effect it has on upgrading productivity, collaboration, and generally IT infrastructure.
A consolidated data center has been an attractive alternative for CIOs to protect the IT investment as many of them have realized that centralized infrastructure and processes help optimize the shared resources and in turn bring greater ROI from their IT investments. This whitepaper explains the various benefits of data center consolidation and how CIOs can work collaboratively with service providers to build an outcome based IT framework that can deliver cost efficiencies, savings and innovation in an organization.
: Cloud processing is turning into an inexorably mainstream endeavor demonstrate in which figuring assets are made accessible on-request to the client as required. The one of a kind incentivized offer of distributed computing makes new chances to adjust IT and business objectives. Distributed computing utilizes the web advancements for conveyance of IT-Enabled abilities 'as an administration' to any required clients i.e. through distributed computing we can get to anything that we need from anyplace to any PC without agonizing over anything like about their stockpiling, cost, administration etc. In this paper, I give a far-reaching study on the inspiration variables of receiving distributed computing, audit the few cloud sending and administration models. It additionally investigates certain advantages of distributed computing over customary IT benefit environment-including versatility, adaptability, decreased capital and higher asset usage are considered as appropriation explanations behind distributed computing environment. I additionally incorporate security, protection, and web reliance and accessibility as shirking issues. The later incorporates vertical versatility as specialized test in cloud environment.
IT Executive Guide to Security IntelligencethinkASG
Transitioning from log management and SIEM to comprehensive security intelligence.
This white paper discusses the increasing need for organizations to maintain comprehensive and cost-effective information security, and describes the integrated set of solutions provided by the IBM QRadar Security Intelligence Platform designed to help achieve total security intelligence.
The IBM and SAP alliance has helped invigorate and transform businesses for decades. With tailored solutions designed to meet your data-driven requirements, we can help you achieve new levels of success.
IBM POWER - An ideal platform for scale-out deploymentsthinkASG
IBM Power Systems is the ideal platform for scale-out deployments such as Big Data, SAP HANA and anything else the requires heavy compute to achieve business goals, faster.
IBM X-Force Threat Intelligence Report 2016thinkASG
Download the latest IBM X-Force Threat Intelligence Report
High-value breaches stole headlines as lackluster security fundamentals left organizations open to attack in 2015.
* The globalization of security incidents is shifting to targets like health-related PII and sensitive personal data
* The growing sophistication and organization of cybercrime rings are helping expand their reach
* New attack techniques like mobile overlay malware are evolving, while classics like DDoS and POS malware remain effective
Getting Better Security from Cloud Based Solutions
This white paper provides simple steps to securely leverage the cloud with examples of security services offered by SoftLayer, an IBM Company
Download the white paper and learn more about:
- Data privacy and protection in the cloud
- Five easy-to-implement practices for securely leveraging the cloud
- SoftLayer security services that strengthen your cloud security strategy
White paper: IBM FlashSystems in VMware EnvironmentsthinkASG
Drive performance in VMware environments with IBM FlashSystem. IBM flash storage delivers extreme, scalable performance for virtualized infrastructure.
This document contains performance and benchmark results for IBM servers and workstations running the UNIX® (AIX®), IBM i and Linux® operating systems. This includes the IBM Power™ Systems servers, IBM PowerLinux (System p™, System p5™, eServer™ p5, pSeries®, OpenPower® and IBM RS/6000®; BladeCenter® Power Architecture® technology-based blades) and IntelliStation® POWER™ workstations.
This document contains performance results for systems based on the POWER processor through January 2016.
Microsoft Azure - Extending your Datacenter - thinkASG University SeriesthinkASG
Presentation given on March 18th, 2015 by Michael Bosse, Microsoft Partner Technology Strategist, as part of the thinkASG Extending your Data Center with Windows Server series.
The presentation focused on how to best use Microsoft Azure in the Enterprise. It includes key highlights of the some of the important announcements made in 2014 such as Snapshot for VM, AutoScale, Azure in China, and ExpressRoute.
Originally from thinkASG "Extending your Data Center with Cloud" http://www.thinkasg.com/about-us/events/lunch-extending-your-data-center-with-windows-server-san-diego/
Think asg double take migrations for the enterprisethinkASG
Presentation given on March 18th, 2015 by Greg Ross from Vision Solutions as part of the thinkASG University Series - Extending your Data Center with Cloud.
The presentation focused on using Double-Take to seamlessly migrate workloads from on-premise to public cloud, from public cloud to another public cloud, and even from public cloud back to on-premise.
Greg takes us through how to move from VMware to Hyper-V and also from Hyper-V to VMware, depending on your specific requirement.
Originally from thinkASG "Extending your Data Center with Cloud"
http://www.thinkasg.com/about-us/events/lunch-extending-your-data-center-with-windows-server-san-diego/
Flash is Changing Business
In business timing is everything. We all know the phrase "Time is Money", right? This is especially true when it comes to business-critical applications. Any delays in delivering data and processing could result in lost customers, lost revenue and lost trust.
thinkASG's new eBook "Our Hero Flash" discusses these challenges and looks at how Flash is changing business as we know it today. Read about how Flash is providing a platform for innovation and making a huge impact on the way healthcare organizations are engaging with their patients. Customer service oriented companies can better connect with their customers much faster than before and decrease time needed to help them.
thinkASG delivers business transformation solutions for world class brands. We help companies evaluate, design, build and maintain highly reliable and scalable enterprise IT platforms to meet business requirements and to foster agility and innovation.
Double-Take for Migrations - thinkASG University SeriesthinkASG
Presentation given on Jan 13, 2015 by Greg Ross from Vision Solutions as part of the thinkASG Extending your Data Center with Windows Server series.
The presentation focused on using Double-Take to seamlessly migrate workloads from on-premise to public cloud, from public cloud to another public cloud, and even from public cloud back to on-premise.
Greg takes us through how to move from VMware to Hyper-V and also from Hyper-V to VMware, depending on your specific requirement.
Originally from thinkASG "Extending your Data Center with Windows Server"
http://www.thinkasg.com/about-us/events/extending-your-data-center-with-windows-server/
Microsoft Azure in the Enterprise - thinkASG University SeriesthinkASG
Presentation given on Jan 13, 2015 by Ion Gott as part of the thinkASG Extending your Data Center with Windows Server series.
The presentation focused on how to best use Microsoft Azure in the Enterprise. It includes key highlights of the some of the important announcements made in 2014 such as Snapshot for VM, AutoScale, Azure in China, and ExpressRoute.
Extending your Data Center with Windows Server
http://www.thinkasg.com/about-us/events/extending-your-data-center-with-windows-server/
Cancer Center Achieves Agility with Cloud Infrastructure - Interconnect 2015thinkASG
Rich de Michele from thinkASG presenting at IBM InterConnect 2015 in Las Vegas.
Session #1530 - "Cancer Center Achieves Agility with Cloud Infrastructure Built on IBM System Storage"
This presentation was given at IBM InterConnect in Las Vegas on Feb 25th, 2015. Discussed how healthcare organizations are leveraging private cloud to meet growing organizational needs and requirements.
Connector Corner: Automate dynamic content and events by pushing a buttonDianaGray10
Here is something new! In our next Connector Corner webinar, we will demonstrate how you can use a single workflow to:
Create a campaign using Mailchimp with merge tags/fields
Send an interactive Slack channel message (using buttons)
Have the message received by managers and peers along with a test email for review
But there’s more:
In a second workflow supporting the same use case, you’ll see:
Your campaign sent to target colleagues for approval
If the “Approve” button is clicked, a Jira/Zendesk ticket is created for the marketing design team
But—if the “Reject” button is pushed, colleagues will be alerted via Slack message
Join us to learn more about this new, human-in-the-loop capability, brought to you by Integration Service connectors.
And...
Speakers:
Akshay Agnihotri, Product Manager
Charlie Greenberg, Host
GDG Cloud Southlake #33: Boule & Rebala: Effective AppSec in SDLC using Deplo...James Anderson
Effective Application Security in Software Delivery lifecycle using Deployment Firewall and DBOM
The modern software delivery process (or the CI/CD process) includes many tools, distributed teams, open-source code, and cloud platforms. Constant focus on speed to release software to market, along with the traditional slow and manual security checks has caused gaps in continuous security as an important piece in the software supply chain. Today organizations feel more susceptible to external and internal cyber threats due to the vast attack surface in their applications supply chain and the lack of end-to-end governance and risk management.
The software team must secure its software delivery process to avoid vulnerability and security breaches. This needs to be achieved with existing tool chains and without extensive rework of the delivery processes. This talk will present strategies and techniques for providing visibility into the true risk of the existing vulnerabilities, preventing the introduction of security issues in the software, resolving vulnerabilities in production environments quickly, and capturing the deployment bill of materials (DBOM).
Speakers:
Bob Boule
Robert Boule is a technology enthusiast with PASSION for technology and making things work along with a knack for helping others understand how things work. He comes with around 20 years of solution engineering experience in application security, software continuous delivery, and SaaS platforms. He is known for his dynamic presentations in CI/CD and application security integrated in software delivery lifecycle.
Gopinath Rebala
Gopinath Rebala is the CTO of OpsMx, where he has overall responsibility for the machine learning and data processing architectures for Secure Software Delivery. Gopi also has a strong connection with our customers, leading design and architecture for strategic implementations. Gopi is a frequent speaker and well-known leader in continuous delivery and integrating security into software delivery.
JMeter webinar - integration with InfluxDB and GrafanaRTTS
Watch this recorded webinar about real-time monitoring of application performance. See how to integrate Apache JMeter, the open-source leader in performance testing, with InfluxDB, the open-source time-series database, and Grafana, the open-source analytics and visualization application.
In this webinar, we will review the benefits of leveraging InfluxDB and Grafana when executing load tests and demonstrate how these tools are used to visualize performance metrics.
Length: 30 minutes
Session Overview
-------------------------------------------
During this webinar, we will cover the following topics while demonstrating the integrations of JMeter, InfluxDB and Grafana:
- What out-of-the-box solutions are available for real-time monitoring JMeter tests?
- What are the benefits of integrating InfluxDB and Grafana into the load testing stack?
- Which features are provided by Grafana?
- Demonstration of InfluxDB and Grafana using a practice web application
To view the webinar recording, go to:
https://www.rttsweb.com/jmeter-integration-webinar
Essentials of Automations: Optimizing FME Workflows with ParametersSafe Software
Are you looking to streamline your workflows and boost your projects’ efficiency? Do you find yourself searching for ways to add flexibility and control over your FME workflows? If so, you’re in the right place.
Join us for an insightful dive into the world of FME parameters, a critical element in optimizing workflow efficiency. This webinar marks the beginning of our three-part “Essentials of Automation” series. This first webinar is designed to equip you with the knowledge and skills to utilize parameters effectively: enhancing the flexibility, maintainability, and user control of your FME projects.
Here’s what you’ll gain:
- Essentials of FME Parameters: Understand the pivotal role of parameters, including Reader/Writer, Transformer, User, and FME Flow categories. Discover how they are the key to unlocking automation and optimization within your workflows.
- Practical Applications in FME Form: Delve into key user parameter types including choice, connections, and file URLs. Allow users to control how a workflow runs, making your workflows more reusable. Learn to import values and deliver the best user experience for your workflows while enhancing accuracy.
- Optimization Strategies in FME Flow: Explore the creation and strategic deployment of parameters in FME Flow, including the use of deployment and geometry parameters, to maximize workflow efficiency.
- Pro Tips for Success: Gain insights on parameterizing connections and leveraging new features like Conditional Visibility for clarity and simplicity.
We’ll wrap up with a glimpse into future webinars, followed by a Q&A session to address your specific questions surrounding this topic.
Don’t miss this opportunity to elevate your FME expertise and drive your projects to new heights of efficiency.
Software Delivery At the Speed of AI: Inflectra Invests In AI-Powered QualityInflectra
In this insightful webinar, Inflectra explores how artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming software development and testing. Discover how AI-powered tools are revolutionizing every stage of the software development lifecycle (SDLC), from design and prototyping to testing, deployment, and monitoring.
Learn about:
• The Future of Testing: How AI is shifting testing towards verification, analysis, and higher-level skills, while reducing repetitive tasks.
• Test Automation: How AI-powered test case generation, optimization, and self-healing tests are making testing more efficient and effective.
• Visual Testing: Explore the emerging capabilities of AI in visual testing and how it's set to revolutionize UI verification.
• Inflectra's AI Solutions: See demonstrations of Inflectra's cutting-edge AI tools like the ChatGPT plugin and Azure Open AI platform, designed to streamline your testing process.
Whether you're a developer, tester, or QA professional, this webinar will give you valuable insights into how AI is shaping the future of software delivery.
Slack (or Teams) Automation for Bonterra Impact Management (fka Social Soluti...Jeffrey Haguewood
Sidekick Solutions uses Bonterra Impact Management (fka Social Solutions Apricot) and automation solutions to integrate data for business workflows.
We believe integration and automation are essential to user experience and the promise of efficient work through technology. Automation is the critical ingredient to realizing that full vision. We develop integration products and services for Bonterra Case Management software to support the deployment of automations for a variety of use cases.
This video focuses on the notifications, alerts, and approval requests using Slack for Bonterra Impact Management. The solutions covered in this webinar can also be deployed for Microsoft Teams.
Interested in deploying notification automations for Bonterra Impact Management? Contact us at sales@sidekicksolutionsllc.com to discuss next steps.
Search and Society: Reimagining Information Access for Radical FuturesBhaskar Mitra
The field of Information retrieval (IR) is currently undergoing a transformative shift, at least partly due to the emerging applications of generative AI to information access. In this talk, we will deliberate on the sociotechnical implications of generative AI for information access. We will argue that there is both a critical necessity and an exciting opportunity for the IR community to re-center our research agendas on societal needs while dismantling the artificial separation between the work on fairness, accountability, transparency, and ethics in IR and the rest of IR research. Instead of adopting a reactionary strategy of trying to mitigate potential social harms from emerging technologies, the community should aim to proactively set the research agenda for the kinds of systems we should build inspired by diverse explicitly stated sociotechnical imaginaries. The sociotechnical imaginaries that underpin the design and development of information access technologies needs to be explicitly articulated, and we need to develop theories of change in context of these diverse perspectives. Our guiding future imaginaries must be informed by other academic fields, such as democratic theory and critical theory, and should be co-developed with social science scholars, legal scholars, civil rights and social justice activists, and artists, among others.
LF Energy Webinar: Electrical Grid Modelling and Simulation Through PowSyBl -...DanBrown980551
Do you want to learn how to model and simulate an electrical network from scratch in under an hour?
Then welcome to this PowSyBl workshop, hosted by Rte, the French Transmission System Operator (TSO)!
During the webinar, you will discover the PowSyBl ecosystem as well as handle and study an electrical network through an interactive Python notebook.
PowSyBl is an open source project hosted by LF Energy, which offers a comprehensive set of features for electrical grid modelling and simulation. Among other advanced features, PowSyBl provides:
- A fully editable and extendable library for grid component modelling;
- Visualization tools to display your network;
- Grid simulation tools, such as power flows, security analyses (with or without remedial actions) and sensitivity analyses;
The framework is mostly written in Java, with a Python binding so that Python developers can access PowSyBl functionalities as well.
What you will learn during the webinar:
- For beginners: discover PowSyBl's functionalities through a quick general presentation and the notebook, without needing any expert coding skills;
- For advanced developers: master the skills to efficiently apply PowSyBl functionalities to your real-world scenarios.
UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series, part 4DianaGray10
Welcome to UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series part 4. In this session, we will cover Test Manager overview along with SAP heatmap.
The UiPath Test Manager overview with SAP heatmap webinar offers a concise yet comprehensive exploration of the role of a Test Manager within SAP environments, coupled with the utilization of heatmaps for effective testing strategies.
Participants will gain insights into the responsibilities, challenges, and best practices associated with test management in SAP projects. Additionally, the webinar delves into the significance of heatmaps as a visual aid for identifying testing priorities, areas of risk, and resource allocation within SAP landscapes. Through this session, attendees can expect to enhance their understanding of test management principles while learning practical approaches to optimize testing processes in SAP environments using heatmap visualization techniques
What will you get from this session?
1. Insights into SAP testing best practices
2. Heatmap utilization for testing
3. Optimization of testing processes
4. Demo
Topics covered:
Execution from the test manager
Orchestrator execution result
Defect reporting
SAP heatmap example with demo
Speaker:
Deepak Rai, Automation Practice Lead, Boundaryless Group and UiPath MVP
Key Trends Shaping the Future of Infrastructure.pdfCheryl Hung
Keynote at DIGIT West Expo, Glasgow on 29 May 2024.
Cheryl Hung, ochery.com
Sr Director, Infrastructure Ecosystem, Arm.
The key trends across hardware, cloud and open-source; exploring how these areas are likely to mature and develop over the short and long-term, and then considering how organisations can position themselves to adapt and thrive.
Let's dive deeper into the world of ODC! Ricardo Alves (OutSystems) will join us to tell all about the new Data Fabric. After that, Sezen de Bruijn (OutSystems) will get into the details on how to best design a sturdy architecture within ODC.
1. The next-generation data center
A software defined environment where service optimization provides the path
IBM Global Technology Services
Thought leadership white paper
Data Center Services
Email IBM
2. 2 Becoming a next-generation data center
Contents
2 Introduction
3 Re-thinking the data center
3 IBM’s vision for the next-generation data center
10 Becoming a next-generation data center
13 Simplifying the journey
14 The urgency of transformation
14 IBM knows data centers
15 Conclusion
Introduction
Over the last two decades, IT organizations have faced an
uphill battle against complexity. As business demands have
multiplied, scores of technologies have been implemented
in an attempt to respond. By and large, this steady organic
growth has resulted in data centers that are costly and complex,
with over-provisioned physical configurations and siloed
management. Virtualization and cloud have helped to stem the
tide, but even they are hampered by data center inefficiencies,
specifically too little automation and orchestration between
data center components.
There are inherent limits to what the data centers can do with
a finite set of resources, however cloud-driven they may be.
These days, with mobility, social business and big data analytics
ratcheting up pressure for greater scalability, continuous
availability and real-time responsiveness, the old data center
mentality must change.
Data centers are no longer simply constrained by four walls.
Increasingly, they are a dynamic collection of cloud and non-
cloud resources that reside in multiple physical locations and
have the automation and intelligence to go where they are
needed to process applications efficiently. This is where the
next-generation data center begins. It is an IT environment
that is simplified, adaptive and responsive, one that allows
IT to shift time and attention from maintaining systems to
innovating business solutions. It is a composite of capabilities
designed for a fast-moving world:
• Software defined environment in which IT resources are
orchestrated dynamically and holistically, able to sense and
respond to application demands in real time
• Hybrid environment where private and public clouds
operate seamlessly with traditional systems
• Continuously available environment able to withstand
component failures and maintain operations
• Cognitive computing environment where systems can learn
and solve business problems using advanced analytics
• Global, managed ecosystem that integrates the elements of
the IT and data center physical infrastructure and provides
uniform management through a single console
This paper explores IBM’s vision for the next-generation
data center, its potential to be truly revolutionary and the
prescribed pathway for getting there.
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3. Data Center Services 3
Re-thinking the data center
Today’s data centers are no longer just a collection of physical
assets. Though virtualization and cloud computing have
expanded the boundaries of the data center and the capabilities
of its resident hardware, most IT organizations still have a very
hardware-centric view of the data center. The focus is still on
optimizing individual infrastructure components—servers,
storage, networks and facilities (such as generators and UPS
systems)—to increase IT efficiency and business value. The
problem is that optimizing these elements in separate towers
invariably lowers the value to the applications they are meant
to serve.
While the hardware components of a data center will
always provide a critical foundation and never be reduced
to completely interchangeable commodity parts, the advent
of “software defined” technologies makes it reasonable to
assume that change is on the way. In the next-generation
data center, an increasing percentage of critical operational
and management functions will be enabled in the software
layer rather than by the underlying hardware. This will
enable organizations to move away from current manually
administered configurations to more dynamic, policy-
driven configurations. The impact on IT will be dramatic,
substantially lowering costs and risks while raising efficiency
and quality of service.
Changing IT’s hardware-centric perception of the data center
is essential to making this transformation and extracting all
the benefits made possible by software defined technology.
However, this is not about replacing a hardware-centric
mindset with a software-centric mindset. It’s about seeing the
data center as a business center and provider of the services
that advance the business and facilitate innovation. It’s about
making critical business services—applications like email,
customer relationship management and procurement—the
focus of an organization’s IT optimization efforts. This higher
level, business-focused view of the data center is central to
achieving greater value. It’s what the next-generation data
center is all about.
IBM’s vision for the next-generation
data center
The fast-changing business and IT landscape is driving the
need for the next-generation data center. New opportunities
cannot wait for resources to be manually procured and
configured. Response needs to be immediate and spot-on
to meet increasing expectations for availability, scalability
and speed.
While virtualization and cloud-based delivery models have
answered the need for greater agility, they have also increased
management complexity and costs. What’s more, the majority
of IT provisioning and management tools are labor-intensive
and increasingly unable to cope efficiently with the extreme
performance demands of today’s application workloads.
The speed at which the DevOps model is delivering new
capabilities and updates is making manual IT operational
inefficiencies even more glaring. And despite organizations’
best efforts to curb them, outages are on the rise, shining the
spotlight on security, resiliency and compliance issues.
Clearly, the demand for more flexible, “always-on”
architectures is mounting, advanced by the dynamic needs of
mobility, big data and social business. These workloads are
raising the stakes for today’s data centers and increasing the
urgency of the need for the next-generation data center.
Email IBMEmail IBM
4. 4 Becoming a next-generation data center
So what makes a data center a next-generation data center?
In short, the ability to remove many of the barriers that have
inhibited IT to date. The next-generation data center provides
a simpler, more adaptive infrastructure that is capable of
responding to disruptive change, melting technology silos
and integrating legacy and new architectures in a single,
manageable ecosystem. Several attributes help define this
visionary model and distinguish it from its predecessors:
• Innovation enabled by service optimization
• Software defined environment driven by patterns
of expertise
• Open standards and support for heterogeneous
infrastructures
• Delivery model integration and extensible APIs
• ITIL-based management and outcome-based metrics
• Global ecosystem supported by a converged infrastructure
and data center infrastructure management (DCIM)
• Continuous availability
• Cognitive computing
• Integrated, active end-to-end security and automated
compliance assurance
• Organizational and cultural change agent
Each of these attributes is described below.
The next-generation data center
breaks down the functional silos and
cultural obstacles that can get in the
way of innovative development and
service optimization.
Innovation enabled by service optimization
In a typical data center, optimization efforts are focused on
improving IT metrics like utilization, response time and
availability. In the next-generation data center, the focus is on
optimizing the services that keep the business moving forward:
sales and marketing, finance and accounting, procurement
and so on. A retailer, for example, would implement cloud
technology to optimize marketing services, not to increase
scalability. Cloud would help the retailer deliver a more
personalized customer experience and provide more targeted
marketing. Even though scalability would be a likely outcome,
it does not drive the decision to deploy cloud.
Service optimization can dramatically reduce the operational
cost and risk of services that are integral to the business.
It allows IT to reduce the resources spent running the
operation—often greater than 65 percent of the IT budget1
—
and allocate more resources to business innovation. This
is important. Increasingly, innovation is viewed as the best
defense against competitive threats. IBM’s 2013 Global
C-Suite Study found the pursuit of extensive innovation to be
especially prevalent in top-performing organizations.2
As hardware becomes more virtualized and abstracted, these
innovations will take place largely above the hardware.
Tomorrow’s services will be designed and developed by tapping
into a near-infinite pool of compute, storage and network
resources without any knowledge of the underlying devices.
They will also benefit from DevOps, which will bridge the
gap between IT operations and development teams, making
them better able to work together toward a common service
delivery goal. New services can be deployed faster and more
cost-effectively.
The next-generation data center breaks down the functional
silos and cultural obstacles that can get in the way of innovative
development and service optimization.
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5. Data Center Services 5
Software defined environment driven by patterns
of expertise
In the next-generation data center, the IT infrastructure
won’t be controlled manually by administrators making
hardware decisions. It will be controlled by software that is
programmed to make those decisions automatically. This
software defined environment (SDE) optimizes the compute,
storage, network and facilities infrastructure, enabling the
whole to adapt dynamically to the type of work required. It
transforms a static IT infrastructure into a resource-smart,
workload-aware infrastructure.
Software defined environments change the rules governing
how resources are deployed, literally programming in an
organization’s business objectives and capturing what IBM calls
“patterns of expertise” to define how those objectives will be
met. These patterns are essentially best practices for workload
deployment, configuration, integration and other complex
IT tasks that have been captured by subject matter experts
and then codified in templates to be reused again and again.
Patterns encapsulate all of the elements required to automate
processing for workloads, including the policies that govern it
(like application requirements and service levels).
When a workloads runs, the associated template is invoked.
The SDE automatically orchestrates the infrastructure
resources to meet workload demands in near real time,
scaling to meet shifting demand and using predictive analytics
to achieve desired performance outcomes. It enables the
infrastructure to be exceptionally responsive to unpredictable
market changes.
What differentiates the next-generation data center’s SDE
from other pattern-driven, software defined solutions is its
ability to encapsulate infrastructure patterns holistically,
codifying the infrastructure in a way that has not been done
before. Instead of managing software defined compute,
storage, network and facilities resources in silos, it includes the
respective middleware and application stacks to manage the
complete workload. This enables IT to automate almost every
aspect of the data center, from network provisioning to storage
setup and provisioning, even power and cooling capacity.
Open standards and support for heterogeneous
infrastructures
The next-generation data center is built on open standards.
With support for platforms like OpenStack, Linux/KVM
and OpenDaylight, it enables organizations to achieve true
interoperability between cloud and traditional models. It also
facilitates integration of today’s heterogeneous infrastructures,
enabling organizations to bring their legacy systems into the
software defined world. This allows them to preserve legacy
applications, hardware, workflows, roles, procedures and data
center practices so they can continue satisfying business needs
while responding to growing cost pressures.
By providing an open platform, the next-generation data
center facilitates the information and service sharing that
is crucial for collaboration and holistic management. The
IT infrastructure can easily be managed as a collective set
of business resources, rather than as discrete compute,
storage and networking elements. Its open design enables
organizations to exploit new technologies more easily, and it
prevents vendor lock-in, increasing the long-term viability of
data center investments.
Email IBMEmail IBM
6. 6 Becoming a next-generation data center
Delivery model integration and extensible APIs
In the next-generation data center, developers will continue
leveraging application programming interfaces (APIs) to
assimilate functionality from disparate service providers and
extend services to a growing array of mobile and other devices.
They will also enable hybrid cloud interaction between public
and private cloud resources. While APIs are designed to
facilitate the integration of cloud models, proprietary APIs
limited to specific platforms can complicate integration and
slow down the pace of new development. IBM®
Watson™
provides a good example of how the next-generation data
center will get around them.
Instead of making IBM’s cloud-based cognitive supercomputing
technology available via platform as a service (PaaS), IBM
Watson is being offered under the software as a service (SaaS)
model as a proprietary software stack with open APIs. The
open APIs allow developers to interact with IBM Watson
to build rich applications or run complex analytics in real
time. This means they can tap into leading edge—and still
proprietary—technologies more quickly and speed the time
to value.
ITIL-based management and outcome-based metrics
With the organization served by multiple delivery models
and a heterogeneous array of systems, service management is
essential to achieving business benefits from IT at a controlled
cost. IT initiatives are more likely to stay within budget,
and service costs are less likely to spiral out of control. IT
Infrastructure Library (ITIL) has long been associated with a
service-focused approach to IT management, so it only stands
to reason that ITIL-based service management, with metering
and analysis for accurate trending, capacity management
and chargeback, should be an integral element of the next-
generation data center.
IT metrics are another integral element. They continue
to measure component-level performance (availability,
utilization, recovery time) against service level agreements
(SLAs), with financial penalties for service outages. This is
especially important with outage costs on the rise. According
to a Ponemon Institute study sponsored by Emerson Network
Power, a single unplanned outage in 2013 cost businesses more
than $7,900 per minute, up 41 percent from the cost in 2010,
with the average outage resulting in over $900,000 in damages.3
What does change in the next-generation data center is the
emphasis on outcome-based metrics, like customer satisfaction,
productivity and the quality of the user experience. Consider
the metrics currently being collected by cities using intelligent
transportation systems. These systems provide real-time traffic
information and alerts to help drivers avoid congestion and
help cities improve roadways to meet citizens’ needs. Instead
of measuring CPU, memory and disk utilization to assess the
systems’ success, cities are measuring reduction in traffic, fuel
consumption and carbon emissions.
Global, managed ecosystem with a converged
infrastructure and DCIM
At this point, it should be clear that the next-generation data
center is not just a physical structure, but a global, managed
ecosystem with the capacity to share resources within and
beyond physical boundaries. It operates on much the same
principle as a converged infrastructure, eliminating the need
to tie server, storage, network and facilities infrastructure
together manually and instead delivering a pre-integrated,
optimized architecture that is much simpler to manage and
scale using orchestration, automation and policy-driven
templates. It delivers cohesive, centralized management in
real time, providing increased visibility into all the elements
of the physical and virtual infrastructure via a single
management entity.
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7. Data Center Services 7
The next-generation data center also addresses the increasing
trend toward data center infrastructure management (DCIM),
automating control of critical facilities systems like power and
cooling. Despite advances in other areas of the data center,
management of these systems often relies largely on manual
input and has been complicated by the erratic demands of
virtualized workloads. The pattern-driven automation inherent
in the next-generation data center increases the need for
DCIM solutions while also enhancing their capabilities.
In the next-generation data center, data can be extracted from
facilities systems and analyzed to drive dynamic adjustments
of power and cooling capacity and to automatically identify
and correct conditions that could lead to outages. This means
that an increasing workload in one area of the data center does
not impact the power and cooling systems in that space. It
also means that as loads are dynamically shifted from server
to server or data center to data center to increase utilization,
information about the physical state surrounding those servers
can be factored in to drive even greater efficiency. Modular
power and cooling systems enable loads to be shifted easily
to reduce cooling demand in an area of the data center. In
turn, cooling capacity and servers in that area can ramp down
automatically, providing considerable energy savings.
Continuous availability
High availability clusters and multisite disaster recovery
capabilities used to be the gold standard in data center
design. But social business, mobility and the continuing
consumerization of IT are mandating even higher levels of
availability. “Continuous availability”—99.999 percent uptime
(the equivalent of only 27 seconds of downtime per month)—is
the standard by which data centers will increasingly be judged.
It puts the focus on uptime instead of recovery, since the latter
is no longer needed. Outages still occur and maintenance is
still performed, but without disrupting service to users.
Continuous availability is the objective of the next-generation
data center. To achieve it, the next-generation data center
will stretch virtualization of an organization’s network,
storage and computing platforms across multiple sites.
Clustering technologies will be deployed inside the data
center, and instances of the data center will be replicated at
other locations. Redundancy and resilience become software
controlled functions. This allows for dynamic, concurrent
updating of data within and between data centers, and enables
maintenance to be performed where needed while the overall
system stays up and running. In addition, business services will
have the automation and intelligence to run from multiple data
center locations with minimal intervention. This lessens the
need to invest in highly redundant power and cooling systems,
and instead focus on optimizing the uptime of those critical
business services.
Continuous availability—99.999 percent
uptime—is the standard by which data
centers will increasingly be judged, and
it is the objective of the next-generation
data center.
Email IBMEmail IBM
8. 8 Becoming a next-generation data center
Cognitive computing
Today’s data center systems deliver tremendous productivity
benefits through automation. Cognitive systems represent the
next productivity wave, with the ability to simulate the human
thought process at extraordinary speed. They have the capacity
to sense, reason and interact with people in new ways. They
can process massive volumes of fast-moving data, recognizing
patterns, detecting anomalies and making complex decisions in
seconds. Their ability to adapt and learn over time and process
natural language is what distinguishes cognitive systems from
traditional analytics.
In essence, cognitive systems magnify human capability,
delivering powerful insights faster than is humanly possible.
They can help doctors evaluate and prescribe targeted
treatments by accessing globally available medical literature
instantaneously. They can help financial services companies
make critically timed investment decisions by analyzing vast
amounts of data about trading patterns, credit risks and market
conditions. They can help cities assess historical weather
patterns against current landscapes and resources to determine
the probable impact of a weather event and develop a plan
for responding. IBM Watson is already demonstrating the
enormous potential of these systems for science and industry
(see sidebar IBM Watson—speeding the way to cancer diagnosis
and treatment with cognitive computing).
Integrated, active end-to-end security and automated
compliance assurance
Interconnectivity increases the risk of exposure, especially
for businesses that are already compromised by rigid security
architectures, manual controls and a multitude of dedicated
security appliances. The next-generation data center lessens
the risk by extending the software controlled environment to
security and compliance.
Software manages and orchestrates everything from identity
management to intrusion detection and policy enforcement.
Security resources are abstracted from individual physical
devices and pooled across system boundaries. An organization’s
assets, processes and information are protected using
automatically executed security policies. Analytics are used for
security monitoring and compliance checking to proactively
identify and prevent security events.
Without dependence on physical hardware, security controls
are easier and less costly to deploy however and wherever
they are needed. Software controls are also more scalable, so
they are able to better accommodate changing business needs
and new applications. Security can be logically wrapped
around applications in a way that is not possible with
hardware-based security.
IBM Watson—speeding the way to cancer diagnosis
and treatment with cognitive computing
With valuable data from patient care and clinical trials locked
in the heads of clinicians and researchers and in medical
databases around the world, physicians are rarely able to
access all the information they need to treat patients. IBM
Watson is helping MD Anderson Cancer Center change that by
improving the knowledge available to physicians and helping
them uncover crucial insights about patient treatment.
IBM Watson runs patient data against new information sources
and vast libraries of medical literature, helping physicians
deliver evidence-based treatment options that are personalized
to patients. Physicians can see mutations that are responding
well to certain treatments, and they are using that information
to identify the best patients for clinical trials. As new therapies
and investigational protocols are rolled out and compared, the
results are being used to advance future care.
Email IBMEmail IBM
9. Data Center Services 9
The next-generation data center leverages an integrated
security strategy to better understand threats and
vulnerabilities in terms of business impact, better respond
to security events with optimal business results, and better
quantify and prioritize security investments. It is an end-to-
end, business-driven approach to security, compliance and
risk management, operating within a governance framework
to ensure that IT’s recommendations and practices maintain
alignment with business goals.
Organizational and cultural change agent
Any description of the next-generation data center would be
incomplete without discussing the organizational and cultural
impact. Converged infrastructures and software defined
environments blur the lines between technology silos and, in
so doing, force a significant cultural change on business and
IT. In truth, the success of the next-generation data center
depends as much on the integration of stakeholders as it does
on the integration of systems and tools.
Data center comparison: evolution from the traditional to the next generation
Traditional data center Software defined data center Next-generation data center
Definition Siloed, hardware-centric infrastructure,
often oversized and complex, requiring
skilled IT specialists to operate and
manage
Infrastructure delivered as a service and
controlled by software that orchestrates
IT decisions automatically across cloud
and non-cloud environments
Converged, software defined
infrastructure leveraging codified patterns
of expertise to automate and execute
infrastructure functions holistically
Operational
paradigm
• Workloads assigned manually to
server, storage and networking
resources
• Manual IT optimization
• Reactive approach to opportunities
and competitive threats
• Workloads assigned automatically to
best-fit resources by policy-driven
software
• Software-driven IT optimization
• Proactive approach to opportunities
and competitive threats
• Workloads assigned automatically
to best-fit resources based on
infrastructure patterns
• Dynamic IT optimization with
cognitive learning
• Proactive approach to opportunities
and competitive threats
Management • Siloed management of servers,
storage and network resources
• Multiple tools needed to accommdate
heterogeneous, multivendor systems
• Holistic, centralized management of
IT resources
• Orchestrated infrastructure
management via shared software tools
• ITIL-based service management
• Increased visibility and simplified
controls via a single console
• DCIM
Metrics • Hardware-based metrics, capturing
component-level performance
• Manual analysis required
• More integrated view of performance
• Analytics used for assessing
performance and addressing
infrastructure issues
• Emphasis on service-based metrics
focused on business outcomes
• Real-time analytics insights used for
dynamic infrastructure optimization
Security and
compliance
• Rigid, complex security architecture
with appliances dedicated to
individual systems
• Compliance checking, reconfigurations
and fixes handled manually
• Automated protection and compliance
provided uniformly via software-driven
policies and rules
• Automated protection and compliance
based on policies and rules
• Heavy use of analytics to predict
events and maintain compliance
Email IBMEmail IBM
10. 10 Becoming a next-generation data center
Formerly fragmented business units and IT organizations must
work together as a team on budgetary issues, performance
metrics and everything in between to make decisions in the best
overall interest of the business. The next-generation data center
also challenges traditional support roles, forcing many system,
storage and network practitioners to move to a more generalist
role that demands greater knowledge about the infrastructure
as a whole while maintaining their domain expertise.
Becoming a next-generation data center
Most data centers, with their siloed, heterogeneous mix
of systems, processes and delivery models, are inherently
complicated. Executing the next-generation data center vision
requires transforming the IT infrastructure through the
abstraction, automation and orchestration of server, storage,
network and facilities assets, and that can take time. Most
organizations will want or need to take a phased approach. IBM
has identified four stages along this transformation continuum:
• Consolidation and integration
• Optimization and standardization
• Simplification and automation
• Dynamic optimization
Transformation continuum
The transformation continuum outlines an evolutionary path
to the next-generation data center. Each stage moves further
away from the complex, labor-intensive, reactive methods
that have dominated the traditional data center toward a more
simplified, automated and proactive data center operation.
Certainly, most companies have already started along this path,
consolidating and virtualizing servers, virtualizing storage and
network resources, investigating or implementing DCIM,
and automating some functions. A few are starting to venture
into the software defined realm, recognizing the potential
of software to quickly configure development resources and
drastically simplify management.
Where an organization enters the continuum is based on
its data center maturity, including the scope and depth of
virtualization, standardization and automation of its systems
and processes. It is not unusual for an organization’s servers,
storage and networks to be at different levels of maturity
and enter the continuum at different stages. Infrastructure
components that support legacy applications might enter the
continuum at the beginning and only go through one or two
stages before maxing out their value. For those components,
the automation and shared services enabled in the later stages
could prove too costly to deploy. By comparison, components
that support born-on-the-cloud applications are likely to enter
the continuum at a later stage. These components are not
only able to benefit from the final stage; they actually need to
progress to that stage to deliver their highest value.
At any given time, an organization’s server, storage,
network and facilities components are in varying stages of
transformation. Each stage of the continuum is designed to
take an organization closer to the next-generation data center
and deliver important efficiency gains.
Consolidation and integration
The first step is to rein in the uncontrolled infrastructure
sprawl that has left organizations without the flexibility to
respond quickly to new technologies, business requirements
or rapidly shifting workloads. Consolidation addresses
inefficiencies, relieving the cost of maintaining more systems
and applications than necessary and saving energy, space and
labor while improving asset utilization.
Once the organization rationalizes and consolidates services
and their corresponding workloads, it is possible to consolidate
and integrate the systems that support them. Integration
begins with virtualization, abstracting physical systems from
the services that are trying to use them. This ability to separate
the logical from the physical provides hardware independence,
and that enables IT resources to be shared and dynamically
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11. Data Center Services 11
served up as needed. Virtualization allows the organization
to do more with fewer physical assets, reducing the energy
demands on the infrastructure while expanding IT capacity.
Analytics are taking the guesswork out of identifying systems
for consolidation and virtualization and radically speeding the
process. By providing a more complete and accurate picture of
the IT infrastructure, they are enabling organizations to make
better-informed decisions about optimizing it.
At this stage, the lack of standardization and automation limits
what virtualization technologies can do. Getting the most out
of the virtualized infrastructure requires progressing through
the next stages of the continuum.
Optimization and standardization
Service optimization is at the heart of the next-generation
data center. When IT services are optimized, it is possible
to redirect IT spending from day-to-day operations
to innovations that drive business growth. But service
optimization requires taking a step back and establishing
standards for the services operating in the data center.
Service standardization helps manage IT cost, quality and risk.
It allows IT administrators and users across the organization
to accomplish common IT tasks consistently and reliably each
time they perform them—one of the key principles of IT
service management (ITSM).
To standardize, organizations must define and prioritize the
services operating in the data center—a process that helps
determine which services are business-critical and which ones
are not. This puts organizations in a better position to make
decisions about rationalizing and right-sizing the data center,
including decisions about the number and size of data centers
and the availability levels to be provided. They can standardize
services and workloads that are most valuable to the business
and retire those that are least valuable and redundant. Fit-
for-purpose analytics and business criticality assessments can
help simplify these decisions (see sidebar Service optimization—
simplified through automation and analytics).
Service optimization—simplified through automation
and analytics
For years, IBM’s fit-for-purpose analytics have been helping
organizations map workloads to their best-fit platforms.
Potential platforms are assessed analytically against more
than 30 workload and processing variables to identify the most
cost-effective platform.
The next-generation data center leverages a fit-for-purpose
architecture to continuously assess workload requirements
against available resources and speed the mapping of
workloads to their optimal platforms. Workloads are shifted
between available platforms to satisfy fast-changing demands,
while maximizing utilization and performance at the lowest
possible cost.
IBM also uses business criticality assessments to lower cost
and risk, assigning workloads to different tiers of service based
on the their value to the business. The most business-critical
workloads are typically assigned to the top tiers, which offer
the highest levels of availability, support and redundancy
at the highest cost. The top tier might provide greater than
99.7 percent availability, 24x7 support for all severity level 1
problems, and multisite redundancy. The bottom tier might
provide less than 95 percent availability, limited support and no
site redundancy.
Segmenting workloads into service tiers allows organizations
to pay for the highest levels of availability and redundancy
only when it is needed. Considerable savings have come from
shifting less critical workloads to lower level tiers. In the next-
generation data center, these shifts are handled dynamically
with policy-driven automation and enforcement.
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12. 12 Becoming a next-generation data center
In today’s heterogeneous, rapidly evolving data center
environment, decisions about which services to keep and
optimize are more complicated. Workloads are not one-size-
fits-all. Each workload’s resource, integration, service level
and data requirements have to be factored in, as does its
impact on the network. IT needs to determine the
accessibility and availability of workload data and its
portability between applications.
Service optimization and standardization lay the groundwork
for automation. By establishing standard policies for repetitive
IT procedures, it is possible to automate those procedures
and assure greater quality and predictability each time they
are performed.
Simplification and automation
This stage represents a major step forward as it turns IT from
a cost center to a service provider. Instead of just delivering
infrastructure, automation simplifies the provisioning and
management of IT services by enabling their delivery without
the need for human intervention.
Automation lets IT step out from behind the management
console. It allows users to direct the deployment of new
application environments and other IT tasks by accessing a
self-service portal and selecting from a standardized catalog
of services. Each time users execute a service request, the
request is fulfilled via an automated workflow in the cloud.
Virtual machine images are created, host servers are selected
and storage is allocated automatically in the cloud according
to established template guidelines. The fact is, workload
automation is an indispensable part of cloud computing.
Without it, many of the features and benefits of cloud cannot
be achieved at an effective price point.
Automation simplifies cloud processing. By mechanizing the
provisioning and scaling of resources, no workload is left
to struggle or use excess capacity. The self-service interface
provides an intelligent front end, enabling users to track the
status of their requests online and eliminating delays and
errors. Automation also facilitates handoffs, such as between
application development and testing, providing consistent
processing and more predictable outcomes.
Dynamic optimization
In the final stage of transformation, the focus is on becoming a
software defined environment, freeing applications completely
from the physical infrastructure so that they can operate more
easily and pervasively in the cloud. This stage extends what
cloud and automation can do.
Logic is programmed into the software to orchestrate the
delivery of virtualized infrastructure resources, along with
corresponding middleware and applications. This allows the
infrastructure to dynamically adapt to changing workload
requirements. Using analytics and cognitive computing,
the software is also able to effectively optimize its response
to provisioning and other service requests as they occur. It
learns from experience and improves with each interaction
and outcome. So instead of operating by a static set of
rules, organizations are continuously invoking and updating
those rules in real time based on situational intelligence and
cognitive learning.
This ability to dynamically optimize helps IT accommodate
the growing number of service requests from line-of-business
users while maintaining security and compliance. It enables
these users to execute big data analytics workloads whenever
needed, without delay and without committing compute
resources any longer than it takes to run the workload. And if
the workload needs more bandwidth, the associated policy can
respond automatically and make the adjustment, then capture
and apply that knowledge to future workload requests.
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13. Data Center Services 13
Simplifying the journey
The software defined movement is justifiably gathering
momentum, and there is no shortage of providers lining up to
participate. Most are offering component-level solutions for
servers, storage or networks while recognizing the benefits of
a more holistic view. As a result, some providers are joining
forces or acquiring companies to be able to offer the full
complement of capabilities required for a software defined data
center. Buyers should be aware that simply bundling existing
solutions under one brand is not sufficient.
When disparate technologies are merged and new layers
are added to the existing management stack, there can be
serious integration challenges. These can counteract the
benefits of a next-generation data center, inhibiting scalability
and increasing management complexity. True integration is
essential, and it is harder to accomplish after deployment.
With it, orchestration between applications, services and
infrastructure resources can be highly automated and
transparent. Without it, automation around access, security
and performance can be difficult, and delays are likely to occur.
Software defining the infrastructure as a whole, rather than as
siloed components, allows for the integration required. So it
only makes sense that the journey to the next-generation data
center should begin with this more holistic view.
Toward that end, expert systems may provide the quickest
route to the integrated, software defined environment required
for the next-generation data center (see sidebar The advantages
of expert integrated systems). Integrated by design, these systems
automate best practices for server, storage and network
resources right out of the box while enabling companies to
tune for their own workloads, service levels, security and
compliance requirements.
The advantages of expert integrated systems
Operational simplicity is a key benefit of expert integrated
systems. Because system resources are deeply integrated
and software controlled, day-to-day provisioning, deployment
and management of physical and virtual resources takes
very little time, enabling IT expertise to be channeled to more
innovative pursuits.
IBM PureSystems®
offerings combine compute, storage,
network and management software into preconfigured
platforms optimized for specific workloads and customer
environments. IDC interviewed 10 companies to assess the
impact of IBM PureSystems offerings on their IT efficiency.
On average, companies experienced:
• 47 percent less time spent managing the infrastructure for
improved staff productivity
• 55 percent faster system deployment
• 67 percent faster application deployment using predefined
patterns to provision development environments
• 57 percent reduction in operating expenses resulting from
platform automation and centralized management
• 32 percent reduction in server hardware requirements,
reducing the data center footprint by 29 percent and
lowering capital costs.4
The best expert systems can sense and anticipate the resources
required for optimal workload performance. They have the
ability to provide unified management for the entire IT
environment via a single console, offering a truly integrated
single point of control rather than a coordinated set of
management tools. Furthermore, they are built on an open
architecture with a standard set of interfaces that developers
can use to innovate and deliver substantial business value.
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14. 14 Becoming a next-generation data center
DevOps can also facilitate the journey to the next-generation
data center by implementing the processes and tools required
for software-driven automation. DevOps can help virtualize
across all data center resources, make those resources
programmable and deliver the automation capabilities that
enable the software defined environment.
The urgency of transformation
One way or another, most organizations are moving towards
the next-generation data center. They are taking steps to
virtualize infrastructure elements and break down management
silos. They are venturing into the cloud to increase scalability
and disconnect applications from physical resources that limit
their availability. Still, it has been difficult to keep up with the
staggering rate of technological change brought about by the
consumerization of IT and the combined impact of social,
mobile, analytics and cloud technologies.
Part of the power of the next-generation data center is the
opportunity it creates to assimilate emerging technologies
seamlessly. Perhaps even more important are the business
opportunities that could be missed without it, including the
chance to:
• Leverage vast social media resources to understand,
anticipate and capitalize on the desires of digitally
empowered customers and constituents
• Spur runaway collaborative innovation by openly
democratizing data across customers, partners
and employees
• Create personalized customer experiences 24x7 using
sentiment mining, cognitive learning and other
analytic tools
Responding to opportunities like these cannot wait for new
hardware to be procured, installed and configured. It has to
happen immediately.
The truth is that as technologies continue to evolve and shape
the way people work, play and live their lives, falling behind
can have detrimental business consequences. Organizations
have a critical choice to make. They can wait for competitors
to lead the way to the next-generation data center, or they
can move past the technological and organizational hurdles
and actively begin transforming now. Getting the right people
and processes in place to help drive this kind of change is
paramount for any company looking to stay ahead of curve.
Part of the power of the next-generation
data center is the opportunity it creates to
assimilate emerging technologies seamlessly.
Perhaps even more important are the
business opportunities that could be missed
without it.
IBM knows data centers
IBM has long been a leader in the technologies that make
the next-generation data center possible, inventing and
steadily improving virtualization, centralized infrastructure
management and the hardware that enable greater control and
automation of IT. While other vendors focus on providing
point solutions for software defined server, storage or network
components, IBM is focused on delivering an end-to-end
software defined environment. Ours is a solution—and a
vision—that crosses all of these data center domains and
addresses the IT infrastructure holistically.
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15. Data Center Services 15
Our deep understanding of heterogeneous environments,
workload-aware infrastructures, pattern-driven automation,
cross-domain integration and orchestration, and analytics-
enabled optimization underlies this vision. It accelerates
the deployment of the simplified, responsive and adaptive
infrastructure required for the next-generation data center.
IBM continues to recognize the importance of open standards
to break down technology barriers, fuse silos of expertise
and deliver on the promise of emerging technologies.
This is especially important as line-of-business users play
a more dominant role selecting and deploying IT services
and as DevOps teams work to facilitate integration and
interoperability across the enterprise.
Conclusion
The next-generation data center represents the next evolution
of the converging IT infrastructure, where server, storage,
network and virtualization resources are abstracted from
the underlying hardware and workloads run on the most
appropriate combination of resources, whatever they may be.
In this environment, software provides the intelligence for
managing the infrastructure dynamically and holistically, based
on real-time workload needs. The next-generation data center
transforms a static IT infrastructure into a dynamic, workload-
aware infrastructure that can anticipate demands and respond
with incredible speed.
Becoming a next-generation data center requires change, not
just in the physical and operational aspects of the data center,
but also organizationally and culturally. The evolution from
hardware-centric thinking to service optimization is critical.
Organizations that want to speed the transformation will
choose software defined solutions that come fully integrated
and ready to orchestrate the entire IT environment. Those
that succeed will be opened up to new ways of working and
innovating—above the hardware—making it easy to operate
in a hybrid environment, speed the development of portable
applications and capitalize on rapidly evolving cloud, mobile,
social and analytic technologies.
For more information
To learn how IBM is helping organizations deliver on the next-
generation data center, please contact your IBM representative
or IBM Business Partner, or visit
ibm.com/services/datacenter
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