By Erica Ogg, 9 August 2007 08:54
NEWS
A business' success or failure hinges on how well it understands the importance of information technology and Hewlett-Packard wants to do it all, said HP executive vice president Ann Livermore at LinuxWorld on Wednesday.
Livermore outlined how the company envisions the next-generation data centre, an idea that has been in the minds of IT executives for several years. The Linux community will continue to be important as more businesses embrace the concept, she told the audience gathered for the conference in San Francisco.
Livermore said almost all CEOs see the importance of information technology to their companies' success, but "almost none of them are satisfied that IT is driving the business outcomes they want".
HP, she said, is committed to expanding and being an all-in-one solution for businesses looking to embrace the combined services plus data centre concept - scalable, fully automated virtual environments.
How HP envisions this architecture is not completely new, she said. It is "in some ways what people have been talking about for a very long time".
The Linux community either currently is or will be factoring into HP's plans in this area. Already one-third of the servers the company ships are Linux-based. According to Livermore, HP ships a Linux server every minute.
IT management software is a market HP wants to own. Livermore said: "You're going to see us invest like crazy" in this area.
HP has already spent a good chunk of change on Mercury Interactive, a management software maker, which it purchased last year. The company is also buying its way into the virtualisation and automation software businesses to compete with IBM's services and software business.
Erica Ogg writes for CNET News.com


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