Read Digital Edition


ADS BY GOOGLE
Top Three Links You Must Click On


VMware Delivers New Products
Introducing vCenter AppSpeed and Chargeback

VMware Monday was set to announce two new products well as a major release of its vCenter Lab Manager 4.

The new products are vCenter AppSpeed, derived from VMware’s acquisition of Beehive, and Chargeback, developed in-house.

According to Raghu Raghuram, general manager of VMware’s server business unit, “If the first wave of the virtualization revolution was about reducing capital expenditures, the next is innovative virtualization management capabilities that allow IT to extricate itself from mundane tasks, become more productive, and reduce IT operating costs.”

The new vCenter products are supposed to provide greater efficiency in the data center, more control over service levels and greater flexibility.

AppSpeed, which will cost $1,250 per CPU, provides service-level reporting and proactive performance management for multi-tier applications running in virtual machines. It gives administrators visibility across all tiers of an application, providing views of application performance, usage and dependencies across both the virtual and physical infrastructure.

Within minutes of installation it’s supposed to discover, monitor and report on application performance and uptime, troubleshoot and resolve performance issues, and virtualize faster. It’s about optimizing application performance and saving time in identifying root-cause of potential issues with application performance.

Chargeback, which runs $750 per CPU, offers accountability across the business by allocating and reporting on costs associated with the use of virtual infrastructure. With it, base cost models, fixed costs and other factors can be mapped to data center resources and then applied across cost centers.

Business units should get a clear view into the resources consumed and their costs – enabling “showback” of valuable information, even for organizations not yet ready to chargeback to the business.

VMware thinks it will help the IT environment transition from a cost center to a “value center.”

Lab Manager 4, first introduced in 2006 and now in its fourth generation, provides IT with an internal cloud for the dev/test of complex multi-tier applications. It means on-demand, role-based access to a shared library of pre-configured multi-VM environments, eliminating repetitive system setup and teardown, while maintain security and administrative control.

New features include unification with VMware Stage Manager, creating a single solution to encompass multiple use cases including streamlined application delivery from development to production; simplified release management; better training, support and online demo environments; next-generation network fencing capabilities to better support teams working on multiple instances of extremely large-scale application environments; and support for both ESX and ESXi form factors to give administrators more deployment choices for internal cloud resources.

Lab Manager will go for $1,495 per CPU.

About Maureen O'Gara
Maureen O'Gara the most read technology reporter for the past 20 years, is the Cloud Computing and Virtualization News Desk editor of SYS-CON Media. She is the publisher of famous "Billygrams" and the editor-in-chief of "Client/Server News" for more than a decade. One of the most respected technology reporters in the business, Maureen can be reached by email at maureen(at)sys-con.com or paperboy(at)g2news.com, and by phone at 516 759-7025.

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

Register | Sign-in

Reader Feedback: Page 1 of 1

  Subscribe to our RSS feeds now and receive the next article instantly!
In It? Reprint It! Contact advertising(at)sys-con.com to order your reprints!
Subscribe to the World's Most Powerful Newsletters

ADS BY GOOGLE
The second set of charges filed last week against Indian outsourcer Satyam Computer Services founder...
IBM has acquired Guardium, a seven-year-old subsidiary of Israel’s Log-On Software transplanted to M...
But on the web, access to services is implicit in the fact that the business is offering the service...
Behaving like it’s got a future, Sun Monday put out what it calls a significant new version of Virtu...
Intel has put out its promised beta SDK for Windows (C and C++) and Moblin (C) developers working on...
Berlin-based ThinPrint AG, the printer virtualization house, thinks it’s got a cloud solution for th...
InformationWeek stumbled on a Microsoft patent application dating back to 2006 deceptively titled “M...
Oracle has offered to cordon off MySQL inside a combined Oracle-Sun to get the European Commission t...
Gartner told Reuters that it overestimated how many PCs Acer shipped in the last seven quarters by a...
Singed by user reaction to its plans to up the price of its support contracts, SAP Tuesday postponed...
Apparently Google Gears ain’t gonna stick around that long. Google Apps will eventually get their of...
Gartner thinks the server business has stopped sliding into the abyss. Third-quarter sales weren’t a...
Office Web Apps, Microsoft’s answer to Google Apps, are supposed to be out sometime in June along wi...
Gartner is buying ~$40 million-a-year AMR Research Inc for close to $64 million in cash. AMD special...
Oracle seems to have divided the open source ranks over the MySQL delay it’s having closing its acqu...
The Korean government is going to sink around $172 million into cloud computing next year under a st...
We hear – well, you know how people talk – that Oracle has been quietly meeting with the European Co...
In response to Opera’s complaints Microsoft has reportedly modified the proposed ballot screen that’...
CA is looking for talent in EMEA: associate account managers, directors of solution sales, senior so...
Microsoft has sold the Folio and NXT businesses it got when it bought Fast Search and Transfer, the ...