Hi! I'm ebizQ producer Krissi Danielsson. The virtualization
sector is hotter than ever as companies rush to adopt and then seek to
provide virtual infrastructures that will provide improved business
efficiency and automation. Switzerland’s Dunes is one of the
latest entrants to the field. And while that mountainous land doesn't
usually conjure up visions of flowing sand dunes, the company does
believe the metaphor does apply to the shifting flow inherent in
effective virtualization. Here to discuss how Dunes hopes to shape the
market is company co-founder and CTO, Stefan Hochuli. Welcome, Stefan,
and thanks for joining us today!
SH: Hello, Krissi -- thanks for inviting
me.
KD: All right! Our first
question today is about your company's unusual name. What was the
inspiration behind choosing "Dunes" as a name?
SH: Right. That's a funny question. The --
where there are several
factors. I mean, some of which are less technical than others. I think
one of the ideas that we didn't want to be called one of the three
letter names or something like that. We wanted something easy to
remember and something that somehow described the philosophy behind the
product we wanted to create.
As you mention in your introduction, I
think sand dunes were the inspiration for many different reasons. The
dunes are something visually visible, a construct, but they are
actually built by millions of grains of sand that need to be assembled
to create the dune and I think this sort of applies to services or
virtual services which we try to build tools for. To provide a service,
you need to assemble a lot of different components in different orders
and ways to create the final service. So that's one aspect of it.
And
then the second aspect of it is that these services keep changing. So
when this shaping sand dunes from one day to another, they have a
different shape so the picture looks different and in the same way,
business agility is required in today's world. Services change from one
day or one week to another. And although they provide the same basic
service, their constituent components or the way it operates may change
from one period of time to the other. So, that's sort of the idea
behind the name.
KD: Well, that makes a lot of sense. Could you tell us a little more
about why companies are choosing virtualization and what Dunes brings
to the field?
SH: Right. I think virtualization has
changed the way we look at IT
infrastructure. You probably know that virtualization as a concept is
not new. It was existing in mainframe computers, a lot of years ago.
But the virtualization in the X86 space changed the possibilities, the
way data center operated, the rapidity, flexibility in which you can
create or change services. And I think what we are trying to do is to
create business process information tool that will also change the way
people look at business automation today. And that is being able to
adapt to rapid changes, conditions, while still providing the benefits
of a business process automation tool which is usually reducing time,
costs and complexity of using the service.
KD: All right. Do you have
some specific examples for how that might benefit companies in the data
center and in each particular industry?
SH: Yeah, there is one example I like to
give because it's
understandable to anyone. You have someone new starting a new company.
You need to provide the necessary infrastructure for him, or her,
sorry. So you need to create an account, introductory service, you have
to sign him or her into the right group, you have to create an email
box. You have to create some storage space for his data and in a modern
virtual environment, you would probably also create a hosted virtual
desktop for him.
So in a classical way, you would send work orders to
the different departments that would complete the different requests
and then the infrastructure would be available for this new person. The
ideal situation though is that the HR person, or the secretary at the
front desk, could do that. So enter the name of the person, the
starting date in some web front end page, hit the submit button and
everything is done automatically. So this simplifies the process. It
reduces the complexity so it allows people who are not technical to
start those processes and it allows IT staff to concentrate on more
added-values activity than the day-to-day routine of IT administration.
KD: All right. So how hard it is for a company to deploy that kind of a
virtual infrastructure for business process automation?
SH: Well, actually, that's a very good
question because of one of the
new features that we will provide in the upcoming 3.1 release is
targeted as the 25th of June, is actually not a feature. It's a way of
distribution. So we now provide the virtual service orchestration
platform as a virtual appliance which means it's pre-packaged virtual
machine that contains an operating system, some additional tools that
are required for further platform to operate like database or a
directory service, the platform itself and all ready to be downloaded
and started. So the efforts to put this kind of system in place is
reduced to downloading an appliance. Starting it and doing maybe five
to ten minutes configuration for the environment-specific configuration
and then you're done.
KD: All right! That sounds pretty easy. Okay. So
how do you see virtualization developing over the next six months as a
whole?
SH: Over the next six months? I think the
next six months will just
confirm the trend that started some years ago. So we are actually in
the market since 2001. We've been waiting for two, three years for the
market to really pick up to become mainstream. I think this is the case
in the last six to twelve months. So we are now really moving from
early adopters to mainstream in using virtualization. Introduction
environments are no longer just testing developments but really
production grade application like mail servers or data bases, and
critical operation as well.
My vision on the evolution is well, that
this trend will continue. Hypervisor and virtualization vendors keep
adding features and increase the limits of what can run within a
virtual machine that there will soon be no real locking factor for
running service in a virtual machine. I think this is, there are less
and less bad candidates for virtualization. And I think in the long
term, to the contrary of some, some, what some analysts think, that the
conversion percentage of virtual infrastructure is going to be much
higher than what it was predicted. So prediction goes in numbers
between 50 and 70 percent and I personally think that this is going to
be much higher than that.
KD: All right. Well, it will be interesting
to see what the future holds. I'd like to thank you again for joining
us today, Stefan. And where can interested listeners go to learn about
Dunes' offerings?
SH: Well, you can visit our website at
www.dunes.ch. Usually on the
main page, there are different links in our current activities, things
the latest news will report, the upcoming release of our 3.1, version
of our platform, and the participation to different events and other
product and solution information.
KD: All right! Thanks again. This is ebizQ
producer Krissi Danielsson
and we have been talking to Stefan Hochuli from Switzerland's Dunes.
Remember to read here and react to a lot of other great podcasts,
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Thanks for listening, and have a great day!