Virtualization News Desk
Virtualization Cuts Application Downtime According to Vizioncore Survey
Improved Disaster Recovery and Business Continuity Now a Key Driver for Virtualization
Apr. 7, 2008 03:45 PM
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Vizioncore announced that the ability of
organizations to recover from failure is much quicker using virtualization
according to an end-user survey. Of the more than 200 responses, 76 percent of
those surveyed stated that they could recover a virtual machine within two
hours, while 73 percent stated that virtualization had helped them to reduce
application downtime. However, just over a third of all organizations that have
implemented virtualization do not have a specific disaster recovery strategy in
place to protect their environments.
“The role of virtualization within businesses
has gone well beyond just server consolidation,” said Chris Akerberg, President
and Chief Operating Officer of Vizioncore. “The results of this survey show
that improved business continuity and accelerated disaster recovery are now
significant drivers for uptake of virtualization. The fact that many
organizations still lack a proper disaster recovery strategy for their virtual
infrastructures highlights the significant opportunity that exists in this area
and is why we feel we are increasingly well positioned to help them protect
their mission-critical applications running on virtual machines. This is just
part of why we see management tools playing a huge role in helping customers
become even more comfortable with virtualization and making the potential
benefits of the technology a reality for organizations of all sizes.”
While server consolidation remains a reason
for implementing virtualization, with 93 percent of customers citing this as
one of their primary drivers, other benefits are also proving to be important
to organizations considering virtualization. Other key drivers include reduced
hardware costs (56 percent), improved disaster recovery (54 percent) and
centralized management (50 percent). Virtual desktop deployment was also listed
as being a reason for virtualizing the data center, with around 20 percent of surveyed people either implementing or planning to implement Virtual Desktop
Infrastructure (VDI). Only three percent listed “green” IT as a driver for
them. “We were surprised at the level of interest in VDI from the people we
surveyed,” said Akerberg. “It indicates this is clearly going to be a big area
for development of virtualization in the future. The lack of interest in ‘green’
is also significant – it would seem that users see this as a fringe benefit,
rather than being a key reason for implementation.”
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