HP has unveiled a series of new
services and hardware releases aimed at helping organisations maintain the
effectiveness of their datacentres.
According to HP, IT leaders are increasingly concerned about their
datacentres' ability to support the business over the coming years. It said that
its new integrated range of hardware, software and services will help alleviate
some of these concerns.
HP's new Insight Dynamics software suite is designed to allow datacentre
managers to visualise and manage all their virtual and physical server
resources, from one place.
Typically, organisations may have relied on enterprise management packages
such as HP OpenView, BMC Patrol or CA Unicenter. "If you have one of these tools
in place, they can show whether your applications and services are running
effectively. However if an application goes down, you can't necessarily see
what's happening underneath, for example there could be a disk or memory
failure, but all you know is that application has failed," said Phil McLean,
industry standard servers business development manager at HP.
McLean added that Insight Dynamics, "Let's you look at your whole environment
and let's you understand what level of performance and service you need for a
particular application and allows that application to be dynamically moved to a
server with the appropriate level of capability and performance, and ultimately
give a better business service."
HP has also announced a new ProLiant DL785 G5, an eight-socket x86 server
based on quad-core AMD Opteron processors. "This is the most powerful x86 system
that HP has ever released. It's got 32 physical processors and can support up to
512GB of system memory using 4GB memory modules. It's basically signalling our
intention to provide the maximum amount of power and capability for firms
looking to consolidate datacentre infrastructure," added McLean.
HP will supplement these releases with a rebranded set of support services,
called Critical Services facilities – a direct result of HP's acquisition of
datacentre consultancy EYP Mission Critical Facilities.
"In the past many firms putting up datacentres built for an average 10-15
year lifespan, but as the demands for new applications has led to an increase in
compute performance being built into datacentres, so has the power needed by
this increased compute infrastructure," said HP's datacentre solutions director
Phil Dodsworth.
"I think datacentre managers are realistic to see that the rate of change and
new challenges may lead to a compromise and that they have to build that risk
into their planning. They'll still get 10-15 years life out of these
datacentres, but they'll have to have major reviews on performance every 3-5
years," added Dodsworth.
Extending the lifespan of the data centre will invariably involve some
retrofitting and re-commissioning, noted Dodsworth – this is far from being a
trivial task. "Options like retrofitting are quite complex, it's like driving an
18-wheeler juggernaut at 70 miles per hour and trying to change the wheel,
particularly if you're running business critical applications," he said.
HP will use the acquisition of EYP to bolster its offerings in this area.
Most of EYP's business concentrated on datacentre design and planning, while the
other parts concentrate on consulting, such as datacentre energy audits. EYP
also had an assurance arm concentrating on risk management, once the datacentre
is up and running.
The extent of the crisis engulfing the corporate datacentre was highlighted
by recent research. HP-funded research found that more than a third of chief
information officers believe that their datacentres will be unable to meet the
rapidly growing demand for business services and applications within the next
two to five years.
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