Websphere News Desk
IBM's WebSphere Virtual Enterprise to Manage Software Applications and SOA Environments
Software Increases Application Performance and Lowers Operational and Energy Costs
May. 29, 2008 02:00 PM
IBM announced that businesses are taking advantage of
WebSphere Virtual Enterprise to manage software applications and service
oriented architecture (SOA) environments with minimal human interaction. The software
increases application performance and lowers operational and energy costs
required to create, run, and manage applications across an enterprise.
WebSphere Virtual Enterprise provides application infrastructure virtualization
capabilities that deliver application server resources where they are needed
most. The software separates applications and services from the underlying
infrastructure. Workloads can then be placed and migrated across a pool of
application server resources allowing the infrastructure to automatically adapt
and respond to business needs. Requests are then prioritized and routed to
respond to the most critical applications and users.
Rotech and Osaka Gas are two companies already benefiting
from WebSphere Virtual Enterprise. Both companies are using the product to
improve application and service performance, ensure business process integrity,
decrease time associated with management and maintenance, and reduce energy
consumption and costs within the data center.
Rotech, a home healthcare provider based in Orlando is using WebSphere Virtual Enterprise
within its SOA to provide consistent access to treatment programs and health
information. In order to achieve this, Rotech needed to eliminate application server
failures, which had previously taken up to fifty percent of its staff time.
WebSphere Virtual Enterprise provides Rotech with dynamic clustering of
application servers, so that service requests can be assessed and deployed
according to availability, policy and priority.
“Virtualizing the application infrastructure has helped us eliminate
maintenance headaches, improve application performance and simplify management
through a single centralized point of control,” said Marlin Clark, Director of
Information Systems Technology, Rotech Healthcare Inc. “Not only has WebSphere
Virtual Enterprise become an integral part of our SOA strategy, it’s also
allowing us to reduce the energy costs associated with running our IT
infrastructure. We talked with BEA and IBM, but only IBM showed a commitment to
helping us make this level of change.”
Osaka Gas, an energy supplier in Japan serving 6.7 million
customers, is using WebSphere Virtual Enterprise to enhance application
performance and integrate its previously siloed application servers. The
company has over 200 enterprise Java applications in a shared services
infrastructure. When an application failed, it negatively impacted other
applications creating an unstable environment.
To rectify the situation, Osaka Gas enlisted WebSphere Virtual Enterprise to
visualize and understand the behavior of its Java applications and implement
autonomic control of the infrastructure, while keeping its existing environment
unchanged. Osaka Gas saw benefits from WebSphere Virtual Enterprise, including
increased application availability and better integration across the business
with no impact to their existing systems.
“Virtual Enterprise
provided us an entry point for application infrastructure virtualization.
Because of the success of this project, we plan to move to a fully virtualized
environment as part of our larger SOA strategy,” said Hiroshi Nakauchi,
Professional IT Architect and Technical Director, Osaka Gas Information System
Research Institute. “We estimate that we’ll be able to reduce our hardware
costs significantly now that we’re maximizing workloads on our existing
servers.”
Virtualization Improves the Bottom Line
IBM WebSphere Virtual Enterprise complements server, storage and network virtualization
by providing application infrastructure virtualization capabilities that can
result in tangible cost savings in reduced hardware and energy costs, reduced
administrative operational costs, planned maintenance cost savings, and
reduction in unplanned outages.
“Companies with an SOA strategy can drastically improve performance of the
infrastructure with WebSphere Virtual Enterprise in ways that translate to
tangible financial benefits,” said Tom Rosamilia, general manager, IBM
WebSphere. “Application infrastructure virtualization can be a key component in
taking an IT organization to new levels of energy efficiency and brings real
value to the business.”
Rotech and Osaka Gas are the newest additions to IBM’s SOA
customer base, which numbers more than 6,550 worldwide, representing a fifty
percent increase from 2007 to 2008.
For more information
on IBM contact Stephanie.Wieczorkowski, Stephanie.Wieczorkowski@text100.com
at Text 100 Public Relations.
About WebSphere News DeskWebSphere Journal News Desk trawls the world of e-commerce technologies for news and innovations and presents IT professionals with updates on technology trends, products, and services in the WebSphere family.