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well anyway....
with server CPU's coming down in price, and lower power chips meeting software requirements just fine, virtualization seems like a band-aid fix for a problem that's already happened - IT departments have bought too many computers with too much power!
maybe IT departments should really look at the system requirements for software a bit more closely. honestly, if something says the minimum requirements are an x.xGHz processor, and recommended specs aren't much higher, maybe they should trust the software developers more.
i've seen some real bonehead deployments where a simple website is hosted on a 2x2 (2 cpu, each dual-core) Xeon server, while a small business with only 8 employees had a 200MB SQL database was running on quad-core with 4 hard drives consisting of over 800GB in total storage space.
i see it happen quite a lot.
server computers don't have to cost a lot. virtualization just seems like an answer to the problem of companies spending too much on their initial IT investment, and trying to recoup portions of it by selling off underutilized hardware.
i have major issues with keeping too many eggs in one basket. virtualization seems like a good idea on paper, but keeping multiple simultaneous operating systems on the same hardware shouldn't really be used where high-availability is a necessity.
maybe it's just crooked IT consultants and salespeople selling over spec'd hardware, but virtualization just looks like a solution to a problem caused by a previous "solution".
next time you want to deploy several key operating systems, spread it out across separate machines, but be a little more conservative on your hardware purchases.
XP
Waethorn December 16, 2007 (Article Rating: