Purpose: The purpose of this presentation is to persuade my audience that using virtualization technology is beneficial for both organizations and the environment. I would like my audience to realize that implementing virtualization can have positive effects for organizations and the environment. My central idea is that virtualization technology cuts down on cost. Intended Audience: My ideal audience for this speech would be managers in Information Technology tasked with improving technology infrastructures. The topic is also beneficial for any person who would has a little network setup at home. Significance: This topic is important to my audience because of the increasing number of people accessing the internet. Implementing virtualization …show more content…
Virtualization reduces cost. ii. Virtualization is an environmentally friendly technology. II. Main Point 1: Virtualization can significantly reduce cost. Show visual aid (Reasons to Virtualize Servers, 2008) a. A survey conducted with nearly 300 CIO's participating has shown that the number one reason for implementing virtualization is cost savings via server consolidation (McLaughlin, L. 2008). i. Server consolidation is the process of hosting multiple virtual machines (VM) on one physical server. ii. A Cisco case study showed that cost avoidance and savings totaled nearly $10 million. Virtual servers were estimated to cost $2,000 to deploy, compared to a physical server which cost 7,000. (Cisco, 2007). b. Virtualization also reduces costs at data centers. i. The total amount of electricity used to operate data center servers and related infrastructure equipment in the United States was $2.7 billion in 2005 compared to $1.3 billion in 2000 (Shah, R. 2012). ii. The U.S. Navy saved $1.6 million a year in electricity cost after virtualizing about of half of their servers (Babcock, C. 2008). III. Main Point 2: Virtualization is considered a "Green" …show more content…
Every server that is virtualized saves 7,000 kWh of electricity and 4 tons of carbon dioxide emission per year (Shah, R. 2012). IV. Conclusion a. Restatement of thesis: Research suggests that implementing virtualization technology should be mandatory for some organizations because it can cut cost and is environmentally friendly. b. Summary of main points: i. Virtualization can significantly reduce cost. ii. Virtualization is an environmentally friendly technology. c. Closing comments: i. Organizations have an opportunity to reduce cost by implementing virtualization. ii. Organizations have the ability to become "greener" with virtualization. Visual Aid (Virtualization in the Enterprise Survey: Your Virtualized State, 2008) Scripted Audience Questions Question #1: Are there other benefits to virtualization besides cost savings and reducing the carbon footprint? Answer: Yes, there is. Virtualization also has the benefit of providing high availability, quicker disaster recovery, and less administration. You could have a setup where multiple VMs provide service for an application. If one VM goes down, you still have the others to service any requests. VMs can be copied as images, so if a disaster were to happen the image can be restored at disaster recovery site much quicker. With fewer physical servers, IT staff can focus on other things other than maintaining the server’s
Cloud computing reduces costs which helps provide businesses save on yearly expenses. A benefit of Cloud Computing is the Scalability factor, companies can start with one server reduce services to the bare minimum needed by the business. Then as the demand rises, they can then increase their cloud utilization to meet their new needs. “In addition, cloud computing is scalable. Traditional servers require expensive upgrades that cost a lot upfront. If your business doesn’t expand as much as you had hoped, that’s money you’ve wasted. Cloud service providers usually let you scale up and down seamlessly.” (Ismail, N, 2017)
Mitchell, “Data Center Density Hits the Wall,” Computerworld, January 21, 2010; Jim Carlton, “The PC Goes on an Energy Diet,” The Wall Street Journal, September 8, 2009; and Ronan Kavanagh, “IT Virtualization Helps to Go Green,” Information Management Magazine, March 2009.
Server virtualisation would enable the bank to split its struggling server up into multiple pieces, each of these instances would be separate from one-another in the fact that they would each be reboot-able individually; limiting downtime to other employees tied into the same network – Providing far superior fault tolerance; no longer is the system one giant domino, but rather many smaller dominos which cause nothing more than a drop in the ocean.
You are a Windows 7 administrator at Contoso, a very large and international pharmaceutical company. You have 25 servers in your network running a combination of Windows Server 2000, Server 2003, SuSe Linux. As your Chief Information Officer is brainstorming with you and his/her staff, you mention that you have heard about Virtualization and it may be a very cost effective and efficient way to upgrade everything to Windows Server 2008. Your boss tells you to research the concepts and to get back to him in two weeks with a recommendation.
Teresa was a senior systems analyst in the IT department in a city 500 miles away from your office. She just finished an analysis of virtualization of server resources for her office, which has
Transform your business from traditional to environmentally friendly by utilizing cloud computing software. Many small to corporate size companies require the use of more servers to get jobs done because server utilization rates are about 5-10%, whereas cloud utilization rates are in the 70% range. Because cloud computing eliminates in-house servers, there isn’t the need for the constant climate control involved in maintaining servers—eliminating carbon footprints.
While these are valid concerns that should be considered, the benefits of virtualization far outweigh the negatives in most situations. This is especially true when the deployment is well thought, configured, and maintained correctly. A properly designed and implemented virtual environment can save money on future hardware costs by consolidating resources. It also provides an excellent way to provide redundancy to critical servers and applications. One of, if not the biggest advantage, however, would have to be the ease and speed of deployment. This brings a level of simplification to IT management that simply does not exist in an environment with physical machines. Other advantages include lower power consumption, ease of creating test environments, and improved disaster recovery abilities (InfoWorld, 2011).
Now with the same ubiquity that is mentioned as above, there is this rampant need for adopting virtualization and separating software from hardware because the recent catalysts of changing culture in mobility and the flexible, scalable nature of enterprise needs presents before it the option of procuring what it needs, when it needs. Then when the user found the need to expand, it also found the need to divert and so re-allocation of resources and moving one’s safety critical data beyond its four walls and a lot of the attention slowly shifted from converting their fixed costs to their variable costs. So if organizations, find underutilized resources in the
There are numerous amounts of benefits associated with the adoption of the cloud. Some of these include, cost effective, easy maintenance and manageability, backup and recovery, easy access to information, flexible capacity and less environmental impact. Cloud computing is cost effective because there is no need to spend money on hardware and infrastructure. Also, due to the fact that cloud computing services offer the choice of paying for what you use, a company can in turn save money. According to Calder (2010),” In only paying for the resources used, operating costs can be reduced”
Virtual infrastructure is here to stay in the modern information technology world. More services and critical applications will depend on the virtual
Through the employment of contemporary virtualization technologies, with the incorporation of advanced tools that expands the coverage of the systems administrator, the cost and labor of operations will be significantly lowered. Efficiency improvement will have a direct impact on operation costs of many institutions. Resources that could have been used in the buying and maintaining data center infrastructure will be used in citizen centered services and other new innovations that can go a long way to assist the citizen and ensure smooth running of the government. Therefore, cloud computing will be a driving force to ensuring efficiency in the way public resources are managed to the advantage of the people.
Virtualization is a proven software technology that is rapidly transforming the IT landscape and fundamentally changing the way that people compute. Today’s powerful x86 computer hardware was designed to run a single operating system and a single application. This leaves most machines vastly underutilized. Virtualization lets you run multiple virtual machines on a single physical machine, sharing the resources of that single computer across multiple environments. Different virtual machines can run different operating systems and multiple applications on the same physical computer. (Virtualization Basics)
Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (VDI) provides for the centralized administration, storage, and provision of multiple computer systems via a centralized server which hosts compressed image files of the operating systems as well as individual user desktops. The server that preforms this function is called the hypervisor. In this way VDI functions as an infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS) architecture that can seamlessly provide computer service to a client which can be as bare bones as a dummy terminal or hearty as a full powered desktop workstation. This capability of VDI technology can alone revolutionize computing, allowing for only a few centralized powerful systems to manage all of the computer infrastructure within an organization, providing service to inexpensive, lightweight, and portable dummy terminals to complete an organization 's computer infrastructure. In addition to identifying the general mechanics of VDI, benefits and pitfalls of the technology, certain legal implications, and varying opinions of the technology, another primary element of research was qualifying the sustainability of VDI technology as well. The research question for the purpose of the paper therefore was formulated “Can it be qualified that VDI is a sustainable technology?”. If VDI was qualifiable as a sustainable technology, its further widespread implementation could revolutionize computing, transforming it into a commodity service-based infrastructure, whereas if it were not qualifiable as
Progressions in virtualization advances empower undertakings to get all the more processing force from the underutilized
This paper is targeted to provide the real time approach and benefits of incorporating virtualization into