#Hyperconverged infrastructure, where networking, compute, and storage are assembled in a commodity hardware box and virtualized together, is no longer the odd man out. Compared with converged infrastructure -- a hardware oriented combination of networking and compute -- hyperconverged brings three data center elements together in a virtualized environment. Instead of a few converged units sitting at the edge of the corporate network, hyperconverged infrastructure has become part of the core data center infrastructure, according to 451Research's latest "Quarterly Voice of the Enterprise: Servers and Converged Infrastructure -- Organizational Dynamics." Hyperconverged infrastructure "represents the next evolutionary step" for what passes as standard converged infrastructure, according to the report. All major server and storage suppliers now produce hyperconverged units, but an early spin-off of #EMC and #VMware -- #VCE -- was an early producer of what became known as #Vblocks, which included #Cisco servers and networking, along with #EMC storage and #VMware virtualization.
#HPE, #DellTechnologies, #Nutanix, and #IBM are now all producers as well.
Hyperconverged infrastructure at one time was criticized as overkill and as handing off too many configuration decisions to a single manufacturer. But IT managers and CIOs have abandoned that critique as more and more hyperconverged units are integrated into the data center with minimal configuration headaches and operational setbacks.
The 451 Research Voice of the Enterprise found that 40% of enterprises now use hyperconverged units as a standard building block in the data center, and analysts expect that number to climb rapidly over the next two years.
For that 40% of users: "74.4% of organizations currently using hyperconverged are using the solutions in their core or central datacenters, signaling this transition," according to the report.
Christian Perry, research manager at 451 and lead author of the report, wrote that "loyalties to traditional, standalone servers are diminishing in today's IT ecosystems as managers adopt innovative technologies that eliminate multiple pain points."
As a knowledgeable manufacturer innovates to produce process efficiencies in closely assembled and aligned storage, compute, and networking, both speed of installation and ease of operation lead to greater data center agility, he wrote in the Sept. 29 report.
Such an infrastructure change also leads to a change in the complexion of the IT staff.
For large enterprises of 10,000 employees or more, 41.3% reported that they were planning to change their IT staff makeup as a result of hyperconvergence. Over a third -- 35.5% -- of enterprises responded that they had added more virtual machine specialists due to the adoption converged systems.
According to the authors, "This is more than double the number of organizations actively adding specialists in hardware-specific areas" (such as server administrators or storage and network managers).
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