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| July 11, 2008 02:00 PM EDT | Reads: |
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According to recent research from IDC, the pace of adoption
of virtualized servers is incredibly rapid among organizations that are using
virtualization, with 35% of servers purchased in 2007 being virtualized and 52%
of those bought in 2008 expected to be so. 54% of those not using
virtualization expect to do so in the next 18 months. While both large
companies and smaller organizations are seeing virtualization as being key to
their datacenter strategy, their next challenge will be to make more effective
use of this capability.
Further Findings Include:
- Organizations are increasing their virtualization of x86 systems for core business applications, although the majority of virtualization is still for test and development and for network server applications. Expertise and skills are the biggest barrier to virtualization adoption.
- Growth of virtualization as a strategy remains strong, rising from 46% of the base to 54%. What is interesting is that virtualization is growing as a datacenter strategy in itself rather than as part of other projects. This supports the view that virtualization is increasingly seen as a standard for a wide range of workloads.
- VMware is the clear market leader in providing virtualization technology with 82% of the sample using VMware. Despite high levels of Linux use, only 3% of the sample were using Xen as their virtualization platform. Microsoft was used by 13% of the sample base with various Unix technologies and mainframe accounting for 14%.
- 59% of implementations have fewer than four VMs or partitions per physical box. The largest growth area for virtualization use over the past year, particularly in small and medium businesses, is improving disaster recovery, backup, and enhancing availability.
- Availability of skills and application vendor licensing are the factors causing most problems for virtualization users. 23% of virtualization users report that their application vendors' licensing is still not meeting their needs and 33% of large businesses report that it limits use of virtualization.
- Despite seeing virtualization as a vital tool for their business, the majority of organizations do not measure benefits and use virtual infrastructure in the same way they do physical infrastructure.
"Some companies have both a large set of applications that can be managed
more effectively and, more importantly, a backlog of applications they need to
deploy," said Nathaniel Martinez, program director, European Enterprise
Servers. "Virtualization enables these companies to rationalize their
application portfolio and deploy applications more effectively. As the market
matures, we expect companies to start to measure their virtualization projects
more closely and look for greater value from virtualization across their
infrastructure."
Chris Ingle added: "The range of approaches makes the right technology
selection critical: Microsoft is making a strong push for market share later in
2008; VMware seems to be in the right place with its focus on business
continuity and virtualization management; Citrix and the Unix vendors are
appealing to their core markets; HP, IBM, Fujitsu-Siemens Computers, Dell, Sun,
BMC, and others will look to take the lead in systems and management."
IDC's 2008 European Server Virtualization Survey: Fast Growth and Wider Range
of Applications IDC #GE56Q, June 2008) provides an insight into trends in
server virtualization in several large European countries. The study was first
carried out in 2007 and has been repeated in 1Q08 with a larger sample of
organizations and a wider range of questions.
Published July 11, 2008 Reads 1,370
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About Virtualization News
SYS-CON's Virtualization News Desk trawls the news sources of the world for the latest details of virtualization technologies, products, and market trends, and provides breaking news updates from the Virtualization Conference & Expo.
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