| |
| Application Virtualization In Any Infrastructure: No Strings Attached |
 |
|
|
 |
 |
 |
Application virtualization is a technologically elegant solution that isolates applications and reduces conflicts. That’s good for IT management and has the additional virtue of being financially alluring. From legacy to the latest enterprise business applications, virtualized deployment eases management and supports secure access. Companies save money and boost efficiency using application virtualization within any IT infrastructure.
As an IT strategy, application virtualization is advanced as a best-practice solution in two critical scenarios.
In services environments, application virtualization is implemented as a VDI solution incorporating application virtualization as a means of controlling the desktop environment.
Deployed in data centers with Citrix Presentation Servers, application virtualization is a strong deployment strategy, speeding access and assuring integrity of the host system. Distributed from a share file, companies save the cost and headache of adding and managing siloed servers.
This session will provide use-case illustrations to de-mystify application virtualization and outline the business benefits of applying this technology.
|
| |
| |
| Bringing Macs Into Your Enterprise with Virtualization |
 |
Speaker:
Benjamin H. Rudolph
Director of Corporate Communications
SWsoft
Track:
Strategy & Practice
|
 |
 |
 |
This session will explore how to leverage the speed and stability of OS X and the workhorse productivity of Windows in an enterprise production environment, and how to bring both to your team via virtualization. Topics of discussion include:
- Level of integration between Windows and OS X
- Deployment and management best practices
- Hardware & recommended configurations
- Common use cases
|
| |
| |
| Cutting I/O Power and Management Costs in Blade Server Environments while Boosting Performance |
 |
Speaker:
Sujal Das
Mellanox Technologies
Track:
Current Directions
|
 |
 |
 |
When it comes to cutting I/O cost, power, management and real estate requirements in blade servers, the ideal I/O solution is a single, unified I/O adapter that can provide required services for all data center traffic types – LAN, SAN and IPC. This is because blade server form factors by nature are limited on space, power and cost requirements. While I/O may be unified on the server using a high performance converged I/O adapter, the demands on the LAN and SAN infrastructure sides of the data center are different. Ethernet and Fibre Channels will coexist in the infrastructure. Finally, there are issues around separation of management domains of the compute servers, LAN infrastructure and SAN infrastructure because they are managed by different groups and capacity scaling and budgetary cycles are independent of each other. All of the above make consolidation of I/O on the blade servers a daunting challenge.
This session presents blade server oriented I/O solutions that are flexible enough to support legacy I/O hardware and management requirements and provide for incremental upgrades to a high performance converged I/O adapter solution that delivers optimum LAN, SAN and IPC services on the server, while maintaining end to end connectivity to Ethernet LANs and Fibre Channel SANs, and separation of management where compute, LAN and SAN capacity can be scaled independently.
|
| |
| |
| Implementing Virtualization to Drive Business Goals |
 |
|
|
 |
 |
 |
Launching a new Open Source, SaaS offering required Mindbridge to re-evaluate its infrastructure and resulting cost structures. The goals included:
- Providing stable computing platforms
- Rapid server procurement
- Leveraging commodity hardware
- Leveraging Open Source technologies
- Maintaining flexibility as new solutions are required
- Integrating proprietary and Open Source solutions harmoniously
- Enabling secure and reliable communications with systems regardless of their location on the Internet
- Exposing elements of systems management to customers
After considerable research, it was determined that the only economical way to accomplish these goals was to utilize virtualization while at the same time integrating various components using web services. This discussion will review the technologies utilized, the problems encountered and the opportunities presented by virtualizing a web infrastructure.
|
| |
| |
| Improving Customer Experience Through SOA and Web 2.0 |
 |
|
|
 |
 |
 |
British Telecom Openreach Portal is one of new breed open-source portal platforms that have embraced new and futuristic technologies to provide an unparalleled service to end customers. BT Openreach Portal provides the facility for UK-based communication providers (CPs) to manage and service their end customer orders ranging from a simple phone connection and Digital Subscriber Line (DSL) to fiber-based private circuits. Being largely a B2B portal, it provided Openreach standardized, silo-based services to the CPs. This provided too rigid a framework for the CPs to manage and access their orders as well as carry out the required order journeys and did not provide a CP-oriented view of data and execution. Further, the rigid deployment architecture hindered the CPs from personalizing their order journeys as well as prevented BT from deploying new or customized services. In this session we will examine how the SOA and Web 2.0 technology-based platform developed in Openreach Portal by wiring up the existing rigid flows and deploying them for execution, through Web and Web service interfaces in real-time and zero down time, gave the power to end users to define their own services and flows.
|
| |
| |
| Increasing Trust and Promoting Reuse In a Service-Oriented Architecture |
 |
Speaker:
Rami Jaamour
Product Mgr. for SOA Solutions
Parasoft
Track:
Issues & Challenges
|
 |
 |
 |
One of the business benefits organizations strive to achieve by
implementing a Service-Oriented Architecture, or utilizing Web Services,
is the opportunity to reuse business components. Asset reuse is one of
the core drivers of the SOA or Web Service ROI calculation. Although
leveraging the service concept provides an avenue for application
consolidation and reuse, these same efficiencies also introduce a
distinct level of business risk.
In spite of the technical risks involved, reusable components are core
to the SOA vision. In order to fully reap the benefits of SOA and Web
services, it is critical that companies find an efficient and robust
solution that mitigates risk, increases trust, and ultimately promotes
reuse. However, in order to promote trust in the business components
that are to be reused, policies that determine how the services are
handled must be followed and enforced.
The ability to attain the benefits of service orientation is largely
constrained by the ability to manage the various SOA domains: security,
management, registry, development, orchestration/composite services, and
enablement/integration. The lack of a solid SOA governance strategy
throughout the entire service lifecycle can result in an inconsistent
and uncontrollable IT infrastructure that compromises the benefits of
SOA. This SOA governance strategy is just the first step. A governance
strategy without the capability to enforce the prescribed policies is
destined for failure.
In order to achieve the forecasted benefits of SOA, including reuse, you
must achieve trust. Trust that your services are capable of supporting
defined business objectives. Trust that your services are scalable to
meet the demands of business partners. Trust that your services are
robust and interoperable. Building this trust means that the SOA
governance strategy is enforced, and this begins in design and is
extraordinarily critical in development.
|
| |
| |
| Leveraging Desktop Virtualization for Security, Manageability and Usability Beyond the Perimeter |
 |
Speaker:
Kevin Brown
President and CEO
Kidaro
Track:
Strategy & Practice
|
 |
 |
 |
Desktop virtualization is a need-to-know technology for 2008 that’s transforming the way organizations handle complex desktop computing challenges:
- Provides hardware independence, enabling support for legacy applications while embracing new standards
- Simplifies desktop management, reducing operational risk and support costs
- Promotes security and data confidentiality using encryption and leak prevention techniques
- Enhances mobility and disaster recovery planning, enabling employees to access corporate applications and data from anywhere, without requiring server farm and enabling access even when disconnected from the network
In this session we will introduce desktop virtualization technologies, present real enterprise use cases , and explain the challenges to be addressed when applying these solution in a corporate IT environment.
|
| |
| |
| Opening Keynote: Time Oriented Architecture: Evolution by Design? |
 |
|
|
 |
 |
 |
Inspired by hundreds of real-world SOA projects from across the world, Miko Matsumura will in this keynote illustrate the ultimate purpose for adopting SOA, which he defines as unleashing the creativity of Composite Applications, Web 2.0, Business Process Applications, and B2B in your Enterprise Network.
The highly evolved, yet pragmatic SOA methodology Matsumura will describe can prevent you getting bogged down in heavyweight governance strategies. He will show the audience how to focus on what's important and yet still develop an infrastructure for change.
This approach will provide a framework about how to understand policies, composites, lifecycle governance, loose coupling, heterogeneous distributed systems, adaptability vs stability, service portfolio management and other aspects of the Intelligently Designed SOA. As Matsumura himself expresses it, in an interview about the upcoming presentation, those attending and watching the keynote on SYS-CON.TV will: "Learn the true purpose of core building blocks of SOA and learn how to address system complexity without getting bogged down in the tar pit of the 'thousands of incomprehensible moving parts' or the intractable political battles that tend to emerge from multi-organizational SOA."
|
| |
| |
| Overcoming Bandwidth Challenges Through Application Virtualization |
 |
Speaker:
Bob Buffone
Cief Architect
Nexaweb
Track:
All Tracks
|
 |
 |
 |
When Best Western International Inc., The World's Largest Hotel Chain®, with over 4,100 independently owned and operated Hotels, found the weaknesses of its VSAT network, high latency and packet loss due to environmental and weather conditions, outweighed its capabilities, the company turned to Nexaweb to identify a solution for its Intranet performance problems.
With its ability to streamline communication across the VSAT network and improve the system’s performance while delivering all the same features and functionality of the application, Nexaweb’s technology was quickly selected for deployment. This solution enabled Best Western to extend the life of its existing infrastructure investment, significantly improve the application’s performance without costly upgrades, and enjoy the drastic reduction in the system’s latency issues. Testing conducted after implementation showed: the new system to be 70% faster and that network traffic was reduced by over 90%.
This session will explore how:
*Using a Nexaweb-powered application ensures the efficient use of existing bandwidth
*To free up additional bandwidth for future growth
*To reduce the number of client/server exchanges
|
| |
| |
| Strategic Virtualization – Creating an Adaptive Enterprise |
 |
Speaker:
Jack Wilson
Enterprise Architect & Assistant VP
Amerisure Mutual Insurance
Track:
Strategy & Practice
|
 |
 |
 |
Virtualization is more than just a concept limited to hardware or software. It is a concept of removing all physical barriers to conducting business. Great strides have been made in terms of virtualizing servers and workstations and this has been a very important development. The question now becomes how wide and deep can we extend the concept of virtualization within an organization.
In this session we will discuss how virtualization can streamline, simplify and remove layers of technology. We will consider this approach in contrast to the normal technology evolution where new technology is usually layered on top of or along side of existing technology, creating an ever more complex and fragile infrastructure. How implementing a virtual environment for the main reason of creating business value and increased productivity has significant other ancillary benefits in the security, business continuity, disaster recovery, support costs, standardization, governance and performance monitoring areas.
The flexibility and adaptability that the virtualized environment creates, means that the infrastructure won't lag behind the business strategy. With a virtualized infrastructure in place business strategies changes can now be accommodated without having to make significant changes the infrastructure.
Amerisure will be considered as a case study as a company that made the metamorphosis from a typical complex, inflexible, physically limiting infrastructure to a streamlined, flexible and agile virtual infrastructure. We'll consider the phases of the virtualization of the workstations, servers, mobile notebooks, softphones and information assets (documents, video, audio). We will consider lessons learned and suggestions for making this critical transition in any organization.
|
| |
| |
| The Role of Policy in SOA Governance |
 |
|
| |