The energy and carbon savings achieved by firms consolidating their
datacentres and promoting home working could be undermined by a drop in
productivity unless the right systems are installed to cope with the change in
IT infrastructure.
That is the stark warning from Brian NeSmith, president and chief executive
of network appliance specialist Blue Coat
Systems, who yesterday argued that many firms undertaking datacentre
consolidation projects to limit their energy use were failing to account for the
subsequent impact on application performance resulting from the greater
geographical distance between the datacentre and the end-user in the branch
office.
"There is a strong trend towards datacentre consolidation at the moment, but
that tends to result in users being more distant from the server running the
application, which leads to longer latency times transmitting data and
performance issues," NeSmith explained. "The problem is often not detected until
after the project is complete, but the fact is that a lot of business
applications designed to run on local area networks (LANs) with short latency
times are not optimised for wide area networks (WANs) with longer latency times.
"
According to NeSmith, in some cases the latency time for sending data from a
datacentre overseas to a branch office could cause the application to fail. "If
you are opening a large PowerPoint file, for example, then the network might
have to undertake 300 to 400 roundtrips to the datacentre," he said. "If you
multiply those trips by the latency time caused by the data being transmitted
over a large distance then you can have serious problem."
The same problem could also afflict home workers looking to access corporate
systems from remote locations, he added.
Blue Coat Systems claims its network appliance helps tackle the problem by
automatically optimising protocols to suit WANs and holding data that does not
need to be sent over the internet on the local client device.
NeSmith predicted growing interest in such WAN optimisation technologies from
companies increasingly committed to gaining the cost and environmental savings
that come from consolidating datacentres.
"We are still early in this datacentre consolidation trend, so few companies
have encountered the latency problem," he said. "But the long-term predictions
are that with firms looking for cost and energy savings, they will end up with
just two datacentres globally – one primary and one for back up – and they will
have to deploy new approaches to limit latency issues if they want to get the
benefits from this strategy."
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