In what may be a definitive sign that cloud services are here to stay, cloud services provider Skytap has announced that its customers have provisioned more than million virtual machines on Skytap Cloud, the company’s hosted infrastructure offering.
Skytap’s primary offering, which the company classifies as a hybrid cloud, is designed to provide end users with the ability to quickly create cloud-based virtual environments using self-service tools and automated procedures.
The virtual environments can be configured to provide applications, networking, collaboration capabilities and other capability to allow businesses of any size to create ad hoc desktop and network services with little or no support from IT staffers.
With this claim of more a million provisioned virtual machines, Skytap is poised to become a major player in the Infrastructure as a Service (IAAS) market. However, Skytap is far from alone, at least when it comes to IAAS and Desktops as a Service (DAAS), several other companies are either ramping up or currently offering both IAAS and DAAS to growing customer bases.
Those potential competitors include Desktone, Vyatta, Integral Networks, Virtual Computer and RES Software.
Even so, Skytap is bullish on their success and confident in their market space. Goodwin said “Launching over one million virtual machines is a testament to the success and tremendous business value that our customers derive from their use of Skytap Cloud.”
In general, the DAAS and IAAS markets are poised for rapid growth, especially when one considers how popular user state virtualisation is as a subset of the technology. The 451Group, an industry research firm, is predicting that the user state virtualisation market will grow at a compound annual growth rate of 61 percent through 2014.
The potential growth of the market is further indicated by a recent study from ABI Research, which states that worldwide market for such hosted virtual desktops is forecast to grow from about $500 million (£320m) in 2009 to a cumulative total of nearly $5 billion in 2016.
North America and Europe will comprise the majority of the market for virtual desktops throughout the forecast period.
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