NEWS
Businesses will increasingly turn to virtualisation technologies to get more out of their IT assets, according to the National Computing Centre (NCC).
With Microsoft entering the virtualisation fray with the Hyper-V application on its just launched Windows Server 2008, businesses are taking more interest in the technology.
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Speaking about virtualisation at the launch of Microsoft's latest server OS, Andrew Hopkirk, head of projects and programmes at the NCC, said: "Even the sceptics are paying attention because the potential is there to be had."
He cited an NCC strategy survey of 120 tech execs in which a quarter said they are already doing something practical regarding virtualisation.
Meanwhile, an NCC PMP survey found 48 per cent of those surveyed are moving to a centralised IT environment - using virtualisation - while 34 per cent have already done so.
But Hopkirk added: "It's very much early days for this set of products. It's up to the market to test these products Microsoft is launching today."
Of Hyper-V, Microsoft's general manager of server and tools marketing, Larry Orecklin, said: "The feedback that we have received so far has been tremendously positive."






Comments
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1. anonymous
You need to have on call database admins, application admins, o/s admins, network admins and now virtualisation technology admins, not to mention an army of management to join them all together.
When 20 servers vanish at once because someone messed up it's a real joy.
And it's an extra layer to patch..
Personally I think it'll take a long time to reach beyond being good for development servers.
2. anonymous
This sounds like the 1970's again - IBM's Virtual Machine OS. Why's it taken so long to catch on?