Today it’s easy to say, “We’ll buy fewer physical machines than we did last year.” At some point, new hardware will be needed to support new virtual systems, and information will be needed to decide how much new equipment to buy.
I’ve been interested in CIRBA since I saw a demonstration of the CIRBA Placement Intelligence Technology package at VMworld 2008. At that time I thought it was one of the 10 most interesting products represented on the expo floor.
In 2009 it’s likely that another factor will come into play for capacity planning decisions: the cloud. Some new virtualization will be suitable for operation outside of a central data centre. Capacity planning will likely be needed even in this arena in order to negotiate the best rates with cloud providers. Knowing roughly how much compute power will be needed will be especially important depending on the overage rates.
For those application workloads that stay in the enterprise data centre, capacity planning (and from my early look this appears to be in the 30- to 90-day range; I’ll let you know if my testing reveals the ability to forecast beyond three months) will regain the mundane but important role it had just a few short years ago when physical servers alone roamed the planet.
If you’re a current CIRBA user, or someone who is considering CIRBA products, I’d like to hear from you. If you’re using a different capacity planning tool, feel free to drop me a line as well.
Targetting AWS, Microsoft? British competition regulator soon to announce “behavioural” remedies for cloud sector
Move to Elon Musk rival. Former senior executive at X joins Sam Altman's venture formerly…
Bitcoin price rises towards $100,000, amid investor optimism of friendlier US regulatory landscape under Donald…
Judge Kaplan praises former FTX CTO Gary Wang for his co-operation against Sam Bankman-Fried during…
Explore the future of work with the Silicon In Focus Podcast. Discover how AI is…
Executive hits out at the DoJ's “staggering proposal” to force Google to sell off its…