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Where the Cloud Touches Down: Simplifying Data Center Infrastructure Management

Thursday, July 25, 2013
10:00 AM PT/1:00 PM ET

In most data centers, DCIM rests on a shaky foundation of manual record keeping and scattered documentation. OpManager replaces data center documentation with a single repository for data, QRCodes for asset tracking, accurate 3D mapping of asset locations, and a configuration management database (CMDB). In this webcast, sponsored by ManageEngine, you will see how a real-world datacenter mapping stored in racktables gets imported into OpManager, which then provides a 3D visualization of where assets actually are. You'll also see how the QR Code generator helps you make the link between real assets and the monitoring world, and how the layered CMDB provides a single point of view for all your configuration data.

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A Network Computing Webinar:
SDN First Steps

Thursday, August 8, 2013
11:00 AM PT / 2:00 PM ET

This webinar will help attendees understand the overall concept of SDN and its benefits, describe the different conceptual approaches to SDN, and examine the various technologies, both proprietary and open source, that are emerging. It will also help users decide whether SDN makes sense in their environment, and outline the first steps IT can take for testing SDN technologies.

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Innovation Is Alive and Well

History is replete with such pessimism. "Inventions have long since reached their limit, and I see no hope for further developments," Roman engineer Julius Sextus Frontinus said in the first century. In failing to anticipate the tech innovations of the coming Industrial Revolution, England's Thomas Robert Malthus argued around 1800 that food production couldn't possibly keep up with the population growth rate. Then there's the infamous quote attributed (some say erroneously) to Charles Duell, head of the U.S. Patent Office at the turn of the 20th century: "Everything that can be invented has already been invented."

Past Its Prime?

No one today is saying that tech innovation is over, only that its prime has passed. But even this assertion is misleading. Rather than rise, peak and decline in a single span over many centuries, innovation tends to speed up and settle down in shorter cycles. For instance, the demise in the late 1980s of one-time computer industry stalwarts such as Apollo, Ashton-Tate, Commodore, Datapoint, Prime and Wang signaled not the end of computing innovation but the beginning of a broader technology movement that ignited the Internet boom years later.

Companies are now in the second half of an eight-year period of technology "digestion and refinement," argues Forrester analyst Andrew Bartels, with most buyers focused on ROI and process changes and most vendors making their products cheaper and easier to use. As a result, Bartels says, tech spending will grow only slightly faster than the economy until 2008, when it will rebound again through 2016.

Which areas will take off? Forrester likes four categories: data center consolidation (virtualization, processor grids, networked storage); intelligent networked computing devices (RFID tags, sensors, smart cards); Web services and service-oriented architecture; and composite applications. Beyond those incremental advances, breakthroughs in nanotechnology and artificial intelligence will lead to inconceivable advances in human intelligence, living standards and longevity by mid-century, predicts renowned inventor Ray Kurzweil in his new book, The Singularity Is Near.


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