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Gartner: Virtualization 'Highest Impact' Tech Through 2012
When it comes to infrastructure and operations, research firm Gartner says that virtualization will be the most significant trend through the next four years.
When it comes to infrastructure and operations, research firm Gartner says
that virtualization will be
the most significant trend through the next
four years.
Not only will virtualization impact IT professionals working on everything
from servers to desktops, it will also mean changes for the market as vendors
compete and also consolidate.
"Virtualization will transform how IT is managed, what is bought, how
it is deployed, how companies plan and how they are charged," Gartner stated
in a summary of the survey's findings. "As a result, virtualization is
creating a new wave of competition among infrastructure vendors that will result
in considerable market disruption and consolidation over the next few years."
One main reason Gartner cites for virtualization's impact is the strong "promise"
of server virtualization, which it says will allow organizations to get much
more out of their infrastructure. In fact, Gartner thinks server virtualization
has already reduced the market for x86 servers by 4 percent in 2006; it expects
there to be 4 million virtual machines by 2009.
The research company also predicts that PC virtualization will "increase
rapidly" during the next three years, with the 5 million virtualized PCs
in 2007 leaping to 660 million by the end of 2011.
"As both server and PC virtualization become more pervasive, traditional
IT infrastructure orthodoxy is being challenged and is changing the way business
works with IT," commented Philip Dawson, vice president of Gartner, in
a released statement.
Reasons Gartner gives for virtualization's rapid rise include "sharp"
drops in hypervisor prices and management costs (thanks to increased competition),
plus increased flexibility and choices due to "decoupling technology that
breaks the close ties and dependencies...between hardware and the operating
system (machine virtualization) and between the operating system and applications
(application virtualization)."
Gartner vice president Thomas Bittman even predicts that "the days of
the monolithic, general-purpose operating system will soon be over."
"Traditionally the operating system has been the center of gravity for
client and server computing," he explained in a released statement, "but
new technologies, new modes of computing, and infrastructure virtualization
and automation are changing the architecture and role of the operating system."
More information on Gartner's take on the virtualization market and what it
will mean for IT overall can be found here.
About the Author
Becky Nagel is vice president of AI for 1105 Media, where she specializes in training internal and external customers on maximizing their business potential via a wide variety of generative AI technologies as well as developing cutting-edge AI content and events. She's the author of "ChatGPT Prompt 101 Guide for Business Uses," regularly leads research studies on generative AI business usage, and serves as the director of AI Boardroom, a new resource for C-level executives looking to excel in the AI era. Prior to her current position she was a technical leader for 1105 Media's Web, advertising and production teams as well as editorial director for a suite of enterprise technology publications, including serving as founding editor of PureAI.com. She has 20 years of enterprise technology journalism experience, and regularly speaks and writes about generative AI, AI, edge computing and other cutting-edge technologies. She can be reached at [email protected].