Altiris will launch new workflow and helpdesk solutions on 29 October,
designed to help businesses deliver efficient IT services through business
process automation.
The IT management specialist unveiled its new Workflow Solution and updated
Helpdesk Solution at its
ManageFusion event in
Malta this week. The tools are designed to enable business professionals
with limited technical experience to create, change, test and deploy business
processes with a drag-and-drop forms editor.
Steve Morton, Altiris’s product management and strategy group vice president,
said the solutions were a major addition to workflow and IT management.
“The idea is to take business processes and map them to a workflow piece,
then have the underlying technology driving conditional tasks and complex
activities underneath the covers down to each individual endpoint,” explained
Morton.
The solutions “will board the lines between our individual solutions, and
talk more at the business and service level as opposed to individual servers and
applications,” Morton said. “People will solve business problems as opposed to
individual technology solutions,” he added.
“Business people want IT to be repeatable, predictable and, in many cases,
invisible,” said Morton.
Details of the next version of the firm's eponymous flagship product were
also discussed at the event.
Altiris 7 will feature an update to the Notification Server tool, and
functionality to help customers manage the challenges of software licence
compliance to ensure packages do not conflict with each other, Morton said.
In the Altiris 6
portfolio, there are many priorities customers face in managing a software
environment, such as software licensing and inventory management, according to
Morton. “Altiris 7 will look at how the notion of the Definitive Software
Library can tie into all of these point capabilities that we offer as part of
our Altiris 6 project,” he explained.
Although virtualisation is on Altiris’s roadmap, Morton said that customers
were wary of the technology because of its complexity. The firm hopes that by
providing free software for personal use it will have a chance to take a
leadership position in the area. Microsoft’s “aggressive” focus on the
virtualisation space will also help catch people’s attention and introduce the
topic, he added.
The Malta event enabled Symantec, which
acquired Altiris six months ago, to provide its first significant update about
the software management firm.
Greg Butterfield, Altiris business unit group president, said that the
influence of Symantec had helped Altiris to achieve ManageFusion’s theme of the
past two years: reducing the overall cost and complexity of managing technology,
and aligning IT with business objectives.
Next month, an integrated product will be released that is designed to
complement the “major upgrade” Symantec made in September to its Endpoint
Protection security product. Using the operational expertise of Altiris, the
tool will assist IT departments in their management of endpoint security, said
Butterfield. “How do you secure, if you cannot identify what you have, and if
you do not have the ability to remedy it?” he argued.
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