Intelligent CIO Africa Issue 28 | Page 68

t cht lk TECH TALK And HCI is far more resilient than standalone legacy systems. The scale-out model depends on data being spread across multiple nodes across the data centre, and sometimes even between data centres that are situated in various, disparate geographical areas. In this way, should an appliance go down, there is no impact on availability or performance. Ricky Pereira, Dell Enterprise Business Unit Manager at Pinnacle One of HCI’s most compelling benefits, is its flexibility and ability to scale. Due to the fact that it is based on software, it can provide infinitely better levels of flexibility and agility than its legacy counterparts could. It works on a modular approach, where each HCI appliance is a separate, self-contained unit, which has been designed to include all the necessary elements to boot compatibility. In this way, should the data centre need more capacity, an extra unit or two can be added on, removing the need for the business to have to specifically provision, configure and deploy additional compute or storage capacity. Another benefit is the improved efficiency HCI offers. HCI lowers costs, both data and operational, without sacrificing features or capacity, and without any disruption to business operations. Compared to legacy infrastructure and integrated systems, hyper-converged infrastructure is far more affordable, and the price tag will drop as the market matures too. With HCI, a significantly smaller amount of equipment is needed, and it is far more cost effective to maintain and support, as it is software-based. As new features are added, they can be easily updated, without the need to replace any components, and the over-provisioning associated with complex legacy infrastructure is removed. 68 INTELLIGENTCIO Improved protection is a benefit too, as with hyper-converged infrastructure, data protection, and features such as data deduplication and snapshotting are built in as standard. In this way, disaster recovery is simplified and far easier. This is of growing importance in our increasingly stringent regulatory environment, where GDPR and POPIA are forcing businesses across the board to rethink data privacy and security. Having backup and disaster recovery built into the infrastructure, makes data protection more efficient and cost effective. Then there’s automated infrastructure. With old, complex and rigid legacy infrastructures, automation was near impossible. However, with hyper-converged infrastructure, everything is virtualised, including storage, servers and supporting services, meaning that the automation of routine operations is totally doable when centralised management tools, such as scheduling, are employed. And we all know that automation equals far greater efficiency, allowing resources to be allocated to crucial business functions as well as innovation, meaning organisations “ VXRAIL BRINGS COMPUTE, STORAGE, AND VIRTUALISATION, AND AUTOMATED LIFECYCLE MANAGEMENT TOGETHER. remain nimble and ahead of their competitors. This is especially vital in an era of Azure, AWS and Google, where companies are looking for a competitive advantage by harnessing the flexibility of public cloud services. Finally, businesses can reap the benefits of workload consolidation, as HCI unites storage, networking and compute functionality into one, fully virtualised solution. Being able to consolidate a plethora of IT functions, including backup, deduplication and WAN optimisation into one platform, can only benefit the business on multiple levels. Workloads become consolidated, making it far www.intelligentcio.com