IBM has used its
Pulse conference in
Orlando to make a number of announcements, ranging from new green ambitions to
new systems management tools.
IBM's first announcement concerned its green ambitions, launched last year as
Project Big Green. Software for a Greener World expands on that project and
includes a number of new releases designed to lower both costs and the carbon
footprint.
New products include Tivoli Monitoring, WebSphere Virtual Enterprise, and
improvements to IBM Maximo Asset Management, Maximi Spatial, Lotus Notes and
Domino 8.5, and IBM Active Energy Manager. New features offered by the firm
include collaboration tools, better infrastructure performance management, and
self-assessment tools that will help firms indentify green "starting points".
"The explosion of computers and networks have helped make the internet and
computing what it is today, but mounting energy and environmental costs
associated with the technology systems that comprise this infrastructure are
taking their toll," said Al Zollar, general manager of Tivoli Software, IBM. "
While most people think of energy conservation from a hardware perspective,
increasingly it is actually software that is providing more options to go green
across the entire organisation."
New data centre energy management software, IBM Tivoli Monitoring, also
announced at Pulse will help firms cut energy costs and consumption, IBM said.
Next on IBM's agenda was new software and services targeted at firms looking
to change the way they do business. “While IT organisations have automated some
functions, the industrialisation of IT operations is still in its early stages,
" said Al Zollar, general manager, IBM Tivoli Software. “IBM is in a unique
position to provide the software, hardware and services to help clients move
beyond siloed management to industrialised operations.”
Zollar told Pulse delegates that IBM could help guide them through a process
of innovation that will increase the automation of many areas of their business,
removing many of the time-consuming administrative problems faced by firms.
IBM Service Management can help businesses to automate service delivery,
monitor and manage their applications and systems, and carry out health-check
assessments, IBM said. Also announced was IBM Tivoli Service Request Manager,
which is designed to ease service desk load and offers call management and
routing functions.
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