Virtualization main players have long been touting the efficiency benefits of their technology. Now VMware is aiming to go one better, taking virtualization to the cloud with the release of vSphere 4.0.
The technology builds on VMware’s Infrastructure 3 and Hypervisor products to further ease datacenter management, said John Gilmartin, VMware’s director of product marketing.
VMware’s venture into cloud computing is not entirely unexpected, with industry watchers pointing out the benefits to VMware in concentrating on new areas — particularly as its virtualization core competence becomes a commodity.
For VMware, it’s an ambitious move. “We see vSphere 4.0 as the industry’s first cloud operating system,” Gilmartin said. “It will help add internal clouds to existing datacenters and enable third parties to sell computing capacity on demand.”
The company’s also pulling out all the stops to highlight the effort, culminating in a mammoth unveiling at VMware’s Palo Alto headquarters with the CEOs of partners Cisco, EMC and Dell attending.
The vision — one that very few IT operations have actually achieved — is to make IT services as predictable and reliable as phone service or electric power. You can call it grid computing, utility computing, or cloud computing, but the ideal is that any application be able to obtain the hardware resources it needs to avoid failing at any moment, automatically, no matter how large the spike in demand.
“We are helping IT organizations do what they have always dreamed of doing but have not been able to do with traditional IT technologies,” Gilmartin said.
Gilmartin put this goal in more concrete terms, saying that the aim is to cut operating and capital expenditures for all apps by over 50 percent while automating control and provisioning so that applications are independent of hardware, operating system, and service providers.
Fully automated datacenter clouds aren’t here yet, and the automation of service provider clouds isn’t either. In fact, although vSphere will enable service providers to provide cloud services, the most immediate benefits that the company is touting today come from private, local clouds.
Those clouds involve no third party and they are realized in the datacenters of the most demanding companies. One story the company told is about eBay: Gilmartin said that the e-commerce giant was able to triple the amount of Web traffic each server in its datacenter could handle using the technology.
That’s the efficiency part of the story. To achieve reliability, the new version of the software includes what it’s describing as “fault tolerance” that can run a real-time shadow version of itself on backup hardware. If the original fails, even if the power was lost in a moment, with no warning, vSphere will handle a seamless switchover to the backup, VMware aid.
Gilmartin noted that fault tolerance is only for the enterprise’s most demanding applications: less-important applications can use a feature that’s already in vSphere described as “high availability,” which backs up all but the most recent few minutes of an application.
Combined with VMware Data Recovery for backup and recovery and VMware’s VMotion data migration software, vSphere 4.0 aims to deliver technologies designed to achieve the goal of zero downtime.
Any software upgrade includes an increase in power, and the statistics of the maximum size of the virtual machine that enterprises can build with vSphere 4.0 represent a significant but incremental improvement: a single resource pool can now comprise up to 32 physical servers with up to 2,048 processor cores and 8,000 network ports utilizing 32 TB of RAM and 16 petabytes (PB) of storage to run 1,280 virtual machines.
VMware calls it the “mainframe of the 21st century.”
VMware’s vSphere 4.0 product is available in four versions for enterprise deployments and two versions for smaller IT environments.
Pricing is per processor and each processor can have up to 12 cores, up from six in the previous version of the software.
For enterprises, VMware vSphere Standard is priced at $795 per processor and includes basic features. Advanced, priced at $2,245 per processor, adds VMotion, fault tolerance, and some security features. Enterprise, priced at $2,875 per processor, adds power management and live storage migration.
Finally, Enterprise Plus, priced at $3,475 per processor, adds the rest of the features including the vNetwork
Distributed Switch for monitoring the most complex environments.
For small businesses, VMware vSphere Essentials starts at $995 for three servers, which the company says is equivalent to $166 per processor. Essentials Plus adds high availability and data protection and costs $2,995 for three servers, approximately $499 per processor.
Article courtesy of InternetNews.com.
Ethics and Artificial Intelligence: Driving Greater Equality
FEATURE | By James Maguire,
December 16, 2020
AI vs. Machine Learning vs. Deep Learning
FEATURE | By Cynthia Harvey,
December 11, 2020
Huawei’s AI Update: Things Are Moving Faster Than We Think
FEATURE | By Rob Enderle,
December 04, 2020
Keeping Machine Learning Algorithms Honest in the ‘Ethics-First’ Era
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE | By Guest Author,
November 18, 2020
Key Trends in Chatbots and RPA
FEATURE | By Guest Author,
November 10, 2020
FEATURE | By Samuel Greengard,
November 05, 2020
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE | By Guest Author,
November 02, 2020
How Intel’s Work With Autonomous Cars Could Redefine General Purpose AI
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE | By Rob Enderle,
October 29, 2020
Dell Technologies World: Weaving Together Human And Machine Interaction For AI And Robotics
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE | By Rob Enderle,
October 23, 2020
The Super Moderator, or How IBM Project Debater Could Save Social Media
FEATURE | By Rob Enderle,
October 16, 2020
FEATURE | By Cynthia Harvey,
October 07, 2020
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE | By Guest Author,
October 05, 2020
CIOs Discuss the Promise of AI and Data Science
FEATURE | By Guest Author,
September 25, 2020
Microsoft Is Building An AI Product That Could Predict The Future
FEATURE | By Rob Enderle,
September 25, 2020
Top 10 Machine Learning Companies 2021
FEATURE | By Cynthia Harvey,
September 22, 2020
NVIDIA and ARM: Massively Changing The AI Landscape
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE | By Rob Enderle,
September 18, 2020
Continuous Intelligence: Expert Discussion [Video and Podcast]
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE | By James Maguire,
September 14, 2020
Artificial Intelligence: Governance and Ethics [Video]
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE | By James Maguire,
September 13, 2020
IBM Watson At The US Open: Showcasing The Power Of A Mature Enterprise-Class AI
FEATURE | By Rob Enderle,
September 11, 2020
Artificial Intelligence: Perception vs. Reality
FEATURE | By James Maguire,
September 09, 2020
Datamation is the leading industry resource for B2B data professionals and technology buyers. Datamation's focus is on providing insight into the latest trends and innovation in AI, data security, big data, and more, along with in-depth product recommendations and comparisons. More than 1.7M users gain insight and guidance from Datamation every year.
Advertise with TechnologyAdvice on Datamation and our other data and technology-focused platforms.
Advertise with Us
Property of TechnologyAdvice.
© 2025 TechnologyAdvice. All Rights Reserved
Advertiser Disclosure: Some of the products that appear on this
site are from companies from which TechnologyAdvice receives
compensation. This compensation may impact how and where products
appear on this site including, for example, the order in which
they appear. TechnologyAdvice does not include all companies
or all types of products available in the marketplace.