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VCE Gives Cisco, EMC and VMware a Single Face VCE Gives Cisco, EMC and VMware a Single Face
By Jennifer LeClaire
November 4, 2009 8:41AM

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The Virtual Computing Environment is a way for Cisco Systems, EMC and VMware to present a single face for clients moving to cloud computing. The VCE partners will remain independent while providing the same benefits as a single vendor. An analyst said Cisco, EMC and VMware stand to profit from the coalition, along with Intel.
 

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In a move to push cloud Relevant Products/Services computing into the mainstream, Cisco Systems, EMC and VMware launched the Virtual Computing Environment (VCE) coalition on Tuesday. The companies will work together to deliver business-ready IT that aims to simplify and accelerate virtualization Relevant Products/Services and the transition to cloud computing.

The foundation for VCE is a shared vision for the future of private clouds -- virtual IT infrastructures securely controlled and operated by one organization that can be managed internally or by a third party and can exist on or off premises, or both. The vision includes Vblock Infrastructure Packages that work to integrate virtualization, networking, computing, storage Relevant Products/Services, security Relevant Products/Services and management technologies backed by end-to-end vendor accountability.

Cisco and EMC also introduced Acadia, a joint venture focused on accelerating build-outs of private cloud infrastructures by service providers and large enterprise Relevant Products/Services Relevant Products/Services customers. Also capitalized by VMware and Intel, the companies said Acadia's model for delivering Vblock solutions will offer choice, flexibility and cost advantages. But will the new deal hurt the companies involved if it fails?

What's Different About VCE?

VCE exists to drive sales of the members' various technologies and to make real their vision of private cloud computing, but the most significant part of the announcement is the coalition itself, according to Charles King, principal analyst at Pund-IT. While the IT industry as a whole loves the notion of collaboration Relevant Products/Services, he said, the shape of most such relationships is conventional in the extreme, focusing on simple product interoperability and customer Relevant Products/Services issues.

"By comparison, the VCE coalition allows Cisco, EMC and VMware to present clients a single face and common responsibility while preserving the partners' independence," King said. "That is, while the three will contribute significantly to VCE, they will also continue to work closely with various partners and with clients who prefer other vendors' products."

King said organizations can benefit from VCE's Vblock architecture and solutions through Intel-based, industry-standard computing and the partners' well-established technology solutions, along with significantly reduced risk and cost via the coalition's rigorous pre-integration and validation process. In addition, King said, VCE's unified sales, service and support Relevant Products/Services strategy offers clients the same benefits as a single vendor's "one throat to choke" services and support. (continued...)

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