The Jury’s Still Out On Cisco’s Server Plans

Cisco Systems’ Unified Computing System Strategy causes a mixed reaction.

“No. 2: I would argue that Cisco is actually protecting (or growing) its data centre networking turf. The advent of virtual switches inside VMware ESX and devices like HP’s VirtualConnect could dilute Cisco’s ability to create end-to-end network infrastructure that is managed under one umbrella, and offers policies that follow applications throughout the data centre.

“In other words, they are also protecting their networking business by moving into this space. Virtualisation (and newer blade systems) are causing a collision between what used to be two separate silos,” Schreck said.

Elizabeth Walther, spokesperson for storage networking competitor Brocade, told eWEEK that “Cisco’s approach to ‘unified computing’ is not revolutionary. Many companies with extensive experience, including Brocade, in solving complex data centre issues are already working on solutions.”

The challenge at hand, Walther said, is that the evolution of the data centre to a fully virtualised state is “extremely complex and should leverage open architectures and industry standards.”

“A dynamic and virtualised data centre holds the promise of many compelling benefits for end users, including increased server utilisation, decrease in power footprint and more efficient operations in general,” Walther said. “However, achieving this goal is a complex challenge that can be best tackled by a broad ecosystem of industry partners and not based on a proprietary, singular architecture of one company.”

‘Choice and Flexibility’ a Possible Issue

Andy Ingram, Juniper Networks’ vice president of product marketing and business development, data centre business group, told eWEEK that “competition is always welcome, but Cisco’s new strategy does not seem to meet the market demand for choice and flexibility.

“In terms of product choices, it’s the rack server form factor that currently dominates market volume, yet Cisco is only offering a blade chassis form factor. At the same time, this product is targeted at customers and applications that have been virtualised using hypervisors and virtual machines, which accounts for somewhere between 12 percent and 20 percent of the market. Cisco is entering a $50 billion (£34 billion) server market with only a partial solution,” Ingram said.

CTO Bryan Doerr of IT infrastructure-as-a-service provider Savvis told eWEEK that “it’s time for the industry to see a different style of compute platform for the data centre, re-envisioned for virtualisation, which is a very healthy development.”

Savvis provides managed hosting, colocation, and network connectivity, supported by the company’s global data centre and network infrastructure.

Doerr said that Savvis has been using UCS B-Series server and accompanying software platform for only about three weeks. “We’re running it though a series of basic-configuration tests and ‘getting-acquainted’ procedures. We’re undecided in terms of how we’ll use it in a platform, or an offering, or in what time frame,” Doerr said.

“What we haven’t done is run it through scale-level testing and QOS -level features, or the API we’d be integrating with. What we have seen so far is that it does function the way Cisco intended. They’ve accomplished a number of positive capabilities, and rendered them well and intuitively through the GUI, so I think at this stage, while it is early in the process, we’ve gotten good feelings from the platform,” Doerr said.