Vendors Inflate Server Virtualization Potential for Businesses, Info-Tech Research Group Advises

    “In their pitches to customers, vendors tend to exaggerate the number of
    servers that can actually be consolidated which can be misleading for
    enterprises looking to invest in this technology,” said Matt Brudzynski,
    senior research analyst at Info-Tech Research Group. “Vendors are quoting high
    consolidation ratios of 12 or more virtual machines per processor, while in
    reality only about half that, six virtual machines per processor is the common
    average at this time.”

    Virtualization is a technique that ‘fools’ servers into thinking they are
    unique devices when in fact they become a shared resource, reducing the number
    of physical boxes needed in the data center. Info-Tech’s Impact Research
    report, “The Business Case in Virtualization”, provides IT managers with the
    information they need to make a business case for purchasing decisions.

    The high consolidation rates touted by vendors aren’t actually happening
    because customers need to leave adequate capacity on existing host servers for
    load-balancing, emergency back-up, and ensuring adequate data throughput to
    disk storage, Brudzynski said. The leading providers of X.86 server
    consolidation technology are VMWare and Microsoft Corp.

    “The industry is moving closer to the target of higher consolidation with
    introduction of quad-core processors that are at the early stages of
    deployment in the marketplace,” said Brudzynski. “These processors provide
    greater throughput to disk storage and will help vendors more effectively
    deliver on consolidation promises.”

    Prior to implementing virtualization, IT managers should do thorough
    analysis of server utilization data over the past year, as well as workload
    forecasting and future performance modeling to ensure the right technology
    choices are made to achieve desired consolidation, Info-Tech advises.

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