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Previous Blogs

August 25, 2015
Is The Tech Market Hitting Middle Age?

August 18, 2015
Building Vertical Platforms for IOT

August 4, 2015
The IOT Monetization Problem

July 28, 2015
The Windows 10 Hardware Argument

July 21, 2015
The Complexity Challenge Drives Shadow IT

July 14, 2015
The Hidden Opportunity of Corporate Smartphones

July 7, 2015
The Analytics of IOT

June 30, 2015
IOT Momentum Starting to Build

June 23, 2015
Breaking the IOT Connection

June 16, 2015
Software is a Service

June 9, 2015
The Challenge of Rising Expectations

June 4, 2015
Insider Extra: Rethinking the Conference Room

June 2, 2015
Win10 + Intel Skylake + Thunderbolt 3 = Interesting PC

May 26, 2015
The IOT Opportunity is Wide Open

May 21, 2015
Insider Extra: The Carrier Challenge for Consumer IOT

May 19, 2015
Maker Movement Drives the Future

May 14, 2015
Insider Extra: The Next Step for Wearables: Health Care

May 12, 2015
Making Sense of IOT

May 5, 2015
A Fresh Look at Wearables

April 30, 2015
Insider Extra: The Amazing HoloLens Leap

April 28, 2015
The Device Dream Team: Large Smartphones and Thin Notebooks

April 23, 2015
Insider Extra: Mobile Sites Should Be Dead

April 21, 2015
Wearables + Connected Cars = IOT Heaven

April 14, 2015
The Future of Wearable Power Is Energy Harvesting

April 7, 2015
Twinning Is Key to Connected Devices

April 2, 2015
Insider Extra: Competing Standard Co-Existence For Wireless Charging and IOT

March 31, 2015
Riding the High-Res Tidal Wave

March 24, 2015
Smart Cars Accelerating Slowly

March 19, 2015
Insider Extra: The Future of Computing is Invisible

March 17, 2015
Smart Home Decade Dilemma

March 10, 2015
Apple Event Surprises

March 3, 2015
Flat Slab Finale?

February 26, 2015
Insider Extra: "Phablet" Impact Continues to Grow

February 24, 2015
Paying for Digital Privacy

February 19, 2015
Insider Extra: The Wire-Free PC

February 17, 2015
Whither Apple?

February 12, 2015
Insider Extra: The Real IOT Opportunity? Industry

February 10, 2015
Business Models For The Internet of Things (IOT)

February 5, 2015
Insider Extra: Is "Mobile Only" The Future?

February 3, 2015
Sexiest New Devices? PCs...

January 29, 2015
Insider Extra: iPhone Next

January 27, 2015
How Will Windows 10 Impact PCs and Tablets?

January 22, 2015
Insider Extra: Hands-On (or Heads-on) With HoloLens

January 20, 2015
Whither Windows 10?

January 15, 2015
Insider Extra: Mobile Security: The Key to a Successful BYOD Implementation

January 13, 2015
Smart Home Situation Likely To Get Worse Before It Gets Better

January 6, 2015
More Tech Predictions for 2015

December 30, 2014
Top 5 Tech Predictions for 2015

2014 Blogs


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TECHnalysis Research Blog

September 1, 2015

The Real Software Revolution? It’s in the Data Center

By Bob O'Donnell

Sometimes, behind-the-scenes work is more important than the up-front star. Just ask anyone who’s worked on a special-effects laden movie or other video project.

In the case of today’s tech business, the “stars” are mobile devices like smartphones and all the capabilities available through them. The real work, however, is happening behind the scenes in massive data centers powering all the services and applications that bring both our mobile and other computing devices to life.

Much of the tech world and tech press focus almost solely on the “stars.” Of course, there are some good reasons for this bias. It’s hard not to notice how quickly many people’s eyes glaze over as soon as a phrase like “data center” is uttered in polite company. For many, it’s just plain boring, and even for interested parties, it can be an extraordinarily complex topic.

Nevertheless, there are some key topics and advancements that are not only worthy of, but frankly, in need of some discussion. One of the biggest data center topics is virtualization. Essentially, virtualization means the ability to run software at a layer that sits above direct contact with the hardware—a process sometimes called hardware abstraction.

Practically speaking, virtualization allows computing devices to do multiple independent things—not just multitasking, but simultaneously running multiple operating systems or functioning as the equivalent of several independent devices. On PCs, not many people have the need to do this, so it’s not a huge market. In servers, however, it’s absolutely essential, and has completely revolutionized the architecture of today’s data centers.

VMWare, whose big VMWorld trade show is happening this week, popularized this development about 14 years ago with virtualization on the server itself. Since then, there have been dramatic improvements to the technology by VMWare, Citrix, Microsoft and others. Even more importantly, virtualization has expanded to other devices as well.

Desktop virtualization—sometimes called VDI (Virtual Desktop Infrastructure)—enables a single server to actually provide multiple independent desktops (complete with operating systems and applications) to hundreds of connected devices. In a classic case of what’s old is new again, this mainframe-like computing model has now become a mainstream part of how computing gets done in businesses.

Unlike the mainframe model, however, today’s iterations can offer workstation-quality graphics, as the result of things like nVidia’s new Grid 2.0 architecture. Not only does Grid 2.0 enable the usage and virtualization of GPUs in today’s servers, it allows multiple GPUs to work simultaneously on a single task, offering even better than workstation-quality performance.

In addition, today’s version of virtualized desktops works with much more than desktop PCs or traditional thin clients. In fact, many of today’s biggest mobile applications—such as mapping, personal assistants, and more—are leveraging the same virtualization-driven cloud-based computing models, and turning all of our smartphones into thin clients. That’s why these data center developments are so critical for today’s mobile devices.

Another key data center technology development is called hyperconvergence. In a sense, you can think of hyperconvergence as taking virtualization to the next extreme, because it involves organizing all of the separate components found in a data center—servers, large Storage Area Networks (SANs), networking routers, etc.—and turning them into a single logical unit that comes under software control.

Like virtualization, hyperconvergence isn’t a brand new technology—although it’s only been around for a few years—but there are some key new developments that are becoming critical for today’s consumers and business users to understand. And once again, there’s a cloud computing-based connection. In fact, the whole concept of hyperconvergence was largely popularized by megasites like Google, Amazon and Facebook, who quickly realized that traditional data center architectures didn’t meet their rapidly expanding needs.

As a result, these companies started to create their own commoditized hardware components and built powerful software to control all of it in a unified way. Now, companies of all types and sizes are looking to create these kind of powerful, yet flexible data center architectures, which will help them power the next generation of services and applications to inform, entertain, educate and transact with us.

To enable those capabilities, traditional server vendors like Dell, HP, and Lenovo are partnering with smaller software-focused companies like Pivot3 and others to deliver hyperconverged data center appliances, which integrate all elements of a data center into a single box. The idea is to offer much simpler solutions that are significantly easier (and less expensive) to manage.

Data center technologies may have bewildering names, but they are playing increasingly essential roles for all the devices and services—both consumer and commercial—that keep us engaged every day. They certainly aren’t as sexy as mobile apps, but they’re at the heart of a revolution that’s bound to be much longer lasting.

Here's a link to the original column: https://techpinions.com/the-real-software-revolution-its-in-the-data-center/41657

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