Results for the tag,
Data Centre Management
Data Centre Management : Data centre management refers to the role of an individual within the data centre (data centre manager) who is responsible for overseeing technical and IT issues within the data centre. This includes computer and server operations, data entry, data security, data quality control and management of the services and applications used for data processing. Data centre management integrates into other IT systems for complete data synchronization including virtual systems, proprietary systems, and automation. Data centre management requires a number of tools, IT policies and strategies to create and maintain a secure and efficient data centre. (Source: Webopedia)
|
|
|
Tight budgets, outages in services and competitive pressures are leading to increasing numbers of organisations to adopt agile IT environments, namely deploying and managing resources more flexibly and cost effectively.
This tension is creating a demand for highly automated unified management solutions to manage consolidated and increasingly dynamic IT operations in a unified way. Unified Manage ... read more
|
|
|
|
|
Today’s demands on the data centre have created an environment of escalating complexity and cost. As a result the simplification of data centre management has become the mantra of every organisation. Concurrently, with the advent of the cloud, requirements for business continuity through disaster recovery and high availability are increasingly becoming business critical requirements.
As such, customers desire open software solutions that simplify IT, enable th ... read more
|
|
|
|
|
As energy becomes more expensive and the demands put on computing resources continues to rise, businesses are looking hard at their data centre and IT power consumption and trying to find ways to lower the burn. Whether a company is considering a data centre upgrade due to outdated and inefficient hardware or thinking about a green-field design and deployment, energy usage needs to be one of the key business considerations addressed when modernising your data centre.. ... read more
|
|
|
|
|
The rewards of a virtual desktop infrastructure (VDI) environment naturally start with, from the point of view of the end user, increased mobility between, better access to information, and more flexibility in access device type (PC’s, notebooks, Mac, Smartphones and Tablets). From the perspective of IT, VDI promises reduced costs thus boosting the bottom line and making IT look like heroes. This is the nirvana of virtually every corporation in the world. And while the ben ... read more
|
|