IBM furthers self-governing server work
Published: 02 May 2002 09:15 BST
IBM has begun a new phase of its work to decrease corporate reliance on expensive computer administrators, with plans to release software later this year that balances work across many computers.
Big Blue is demonstrating a second phase in its eLiza plan to build autonomic computers that can anticipate and recover from problems without human intervention. Now IBM is showing software called Enterprise Workload Manager that governs not just single servers but groups, monitoring the machines and shifting work among them.
IBM is aggressively researching ways to get groups of servers to work together without human intervention, but it isn't the only one. Sun Microsystems in February uncloaked "N1", which treats groups of computers like a single pool of processing and storage power. And Hewlett-Packard has its "utility data centre" plans to simplify management of data centers crammed with computing equipment.
Selected customers will be able to try the workload management software later this year, with its widespread availability on mainframes, Unix, Windows and Linux servers in 2003, IBM said. IBM also will announce several eLiza components that will be available for individual servers earlier:
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