A better way to build
Traditionally, all layers of computing environments, hardware, operating systems, applications, and storage, were static, configured to interact properly and to support a specific computing solution. Components were installed to particular computers, resulting in a tightly-bound system that often made adapting to change difficult. Creating new capability entailed procuring and configuring the hardware, software, and interfaces which could be costly and time intensive.
Virtualization frees each element of this system from the other. In a virtualized stack, each element is logically isolated and independent. By separating the different layers in the logic stack, you have greater flexibility and more simplified change management because you don’t configure each element to get them to work together. Computing components become instantly available. This makes it easier to add, update, and support your infrastructure elements, which creates the foundation for utility computing and a much more nimble organization.
Realize the benefits of virtualization
With a comprehensive virtualization strategy you can:
Help reduce your total cost of ownership and increase your return on investment across your entire computing infrastructure.
Turn computing assets into on-demand services to improve your business agility.
Maintain "one application, one server" while reducing physical server sprawl through server consolidation and provisioning.
Provide optimal desktop solutions for different user needs while still meeting ICT requirements.
Centrally provision and manage both physical and virtual resources.
Help ensure effective business continuity and disaster recovery by compartmentalizing workflows and maintaining failover plans.
Rapidly model and test different environments without significant expansion of hardware and physical resources.
Improve security by isolating computing layers and minimizing the chance of widespread failure.