EGUIDE:
In this e-guide we give an overview to buying hyper-converged in which we dig into its benefits, such as ease of deployment, resource efficiency, low Opex costs and reduced use of datacentre space. But we also look at the potential pitfalls that include the difficulties of troubleshooting in a tightly-layered environment.
EZINE:
In this week's Computer Weekly, our latest buyer's guide looks at the future of robotic process automation (RPA). Google's legal victory against Oracle over the use of Java APIs has huge significance for software developers. And we find out how expectations of IT have grown as firms prepare for the post-Covid workplace. Read the issue now.
EGUIDE:
In this e-guide: Simplifying the deployment and management of datacentre hardware systems is one of the main draws of converged and hyper-converged infrastructure setups for enterprises.
EGUIDE:
This expert e-guide presents a case study of how a professional sports team's IT department was able to consolidate 200 physical servers into 16 blade servers with the help of a unified computing infrastructure.
WHITE PAPER:
This critical study offers insight into how 5 companies excelled after implementing converged infrastructure systems, greatly improving the outlook for their data centers.
sponsored by Hewlett-Packard Enterprise and Intel ®
VIDEO:
This brief on-demand webcast provides information about the software-defined data center, explaining what this converged infrastructure trend is and how it can benefit your organization. Also inside, learn about the role of software-defined networking (SDN).
EGUIDE:
This guide interrogates VCE President Chad Sakac about plans to expand EMC's converged infrastructure offerings. It takes for form of a Q&A wherein there is a discussion of the changing shape of the converged infrastructure landscape.
WHITE PAPER:
This white paper delves into an enterprise-class distributed file system that provides you with the tools necessary to manage multiple file workloads in an efficient and simple manner.
EBOOK:
Software-defined technology has been around for years, but enterprises are still getting used to it. Hyper-converged systems come as software-only or preinstalled turnkey hardware.