These developments -- announced at IBM's System z Summit symposium in New York City -- are part of IBM's five-year, $100 million mainframe simplification investment to help small- and medium-sized companies run modern business applications on System z using in-house expertise. The announcements help demonstrate how System z can deliver superior benefits over distributed systems.
IBM Destination z
To help businesses adopt, manage and migrate to the mainframe, IBM launched a strategic program, dubbed as IBM Destination z. As one of its initial services, it provides an online meeting place (available at
www.ibm.com/...) for customers, systems integrators, IBM Business Partners, software vendors and academic institutions to connect with each other and with mainframe experts, access development tools and the latest mainframe solutions. IBM Destination z provides links to platform economics -- such as total cost of ownership tools -- and case histories that reveal financial and business benefits.
For administrators, it provides technical guidance from top systems integrators, workload management tools and academic resources to make mainframe migration faster and easier using standards-based code, such as Java* and C++, or popular Web services capabilities such as IBM DB2® and WebSphere®.
In addition, IBM is launching a System z program for systems integrators to drive business development and provide a broad spectrum of technical resources. More than 20 IBM Business Partners and leading systems integrators, such as France-based information technology services company Sogeti, have already joined IBM Destination z.
"The mainframe is stronger than ever. With the popularity of a SOA (Service Oriented Architecture), we're seeing a rebirth for the mainframe," said Jean-Marc Gaultier, vice president of Sogeti. "Sogeti is seeing a lot of client interest in the mainframe. In fact, to support our clients in this area, the company is launching a Mainframe Academy in Europe to train and introduce college graduates to mainframe technology.
Sogeti has almost 40 years of experience in providing mainframe services to clients, and we see this as an area of continued growth for the Sogeti Group."
Software Simplification
The new IBM software announced today addresses a number of areas most crucial to a broad swath of customers, including enterprise management and security compliance. For example, the new software:
Simplifies compliance while thwarting threats.
Leveraging technology from its recent acquisition
of Consul, IBM announced Tivoli zSecure V1.8.1
suite with modular solutions designed to help
administer mainframe security servers, monitor
threats, audit usage and configurations, and
enforce policy compliance. This comprehensive
suite can enhance mainframe security by
automating time-consuming administration and
audit processes. The suite can also ease
security compliance, which plagues organizations
already flooded with numerous regulatory
adherence codes, such as the daunting task of
maintaining audit and controls documentation
while automatically detecting security exposures.
It provides quick analysis and reporting on
mainframe events.
Eases management of consolidated environments.
One of the most important challenges corporations
face as they consolidate many distributed servers
onto a single virtualized mainframe environment
is relating IT resources consumed to the
departments that use the system. To help
simplify the process, IBM is introducing IT Value
Based Analytics (ITVBA) to drive IT cost
transparency. Using IBM's Global Business
Services methodology along with Tivoli Usage
Accounting Manager and Tivoli Decision Support
tools, business and IT executives have on-demand
information to manage an organization's IT
resources. By relating IT costs to business
services, these tools help to better manage and
optimize mainframe and distributed resources.
Simplifies the management of large applications.
IBM is enhancing the mainframe's renowned
virtualization software, z/VM, by supporting ten
times more virtualized memory and up to 256 GB of
real memory, which is equal to approximately 192
days of MP3 music or 1,024 sets of encyclopedias.
The additional amount of memory supported helps
enable customers to significantly increase the
amount of memory consumed by virtual servers
running on z/VM, thus enhancing the server
consolidation capabilities of the platform. z/VM
is designed to consolidate burgeoning server
farms by replacing physical servers with
"virtual" servers running in a single mainframe.
The software lowers energy consumption and other
costs associated with data centers that have
hundreds of single-application servers. This new
z/VM enhancement can increase scalability by
consolidating more memory-intensive workloads
such as database applications onto a single copy
of z/VM -- which may result in greater cost
savings.
"Last year, we announced a bold $100 million effort to simplify the mainframe by 2011. Today's announcements clearly prove that IBM is delivering on that plan around common business requirements deemed critical by our customers -- economics, efficiency and security,"
said Jim Stallings, general manager of IBM System z.
IBM Implementation Services for Customers with Multiple Mainframes
IBM also announced IBM Implementation Services for Parallel Sysplex, a new service product designed to help clients implement and optimize a clustered mainframe environment. Parallel Sysplex enables an expanding infrastructure to be an effective, resilient foundation that can adapt to new technologies and support opportunities for growth. Available immediately, IBM is offering eight new modules from infrastructure review to availability and performance assessment to deployment planning. This new service product is part of a family of IBM High Availability solutions that allows clients to choose cost-effective and appropriate technology solutions to meet business needs.
System z Summit
In conjunction with today's announcements, IBM is hosting its System z Summit symposium with many of the industry's top technology analysts. Also appearing at System z Summit are IBM customers, business partners, system integrators, as well as university professors and students who participate in the IBM Academic Initiative for System z program. More than 300 universities worldwide have adopted IBM's mainframe education program for 21st century skills, and over 42,000 have been educated about the mainframe.
System z Summit attendees received a recap of recent and new announcements regarding the benefits of building, running, and managing modern applications and architectures on System z, using modern tools, including those within the IBM software brands Lotus**, Rational®, DB2®, Tivoli® and WebSphere®.
For more information about IBM, visit www.ibm.com.