Dec 2, 2008 : HP Trims IT Infrastructure, Saves $1B
📅 - In an effort to consolidate and tighten up its IT infrastructure, a project other large IT firms like Dell have implemented in the past, Hewlett-Packard (hp.com) announced on Monday it has completed its three-year revamping initiative of its IT operations, removing $1 billion in costs out of the company and reducing its annual power consumption by 60 percent.
According to reports in The Register, Randy Mott, HP's chief information officer, has been able to condense the company's 85 data centers down to "a six pack of three redundant, highly virtualization data centers" over the past three years. The six facilities currently give HP a footprint of 342,000 square feet of floor space, with the ability to expand to more than double its capacity.
Mott, who joined HP in 2005, was behind Dell's massive internal IT consolidation project a few years ago as well, where he squeezed the company's 22 data centers into six highly-efficient facilities with room to spare.
Part of Mott's goals with HP also involved cutting down the company's server count from 25,000 to around 14,000. Although the exact number hasn't been released by the company, HP says it has reduced the number of servers by around 40 percent, which according to The Register, means HP currently has around 15,000 boxes.
HP says it has also cut its 6,000-strong application portfolio down to around 1,500 and became the first customer for its NonStop-based Neoview data warehouse product, which was introduced in April 2007. Through this part of the project, "HP has consolidated 762 data warehouses and data marts down to a single data warehouse running on a Neoware NonStop cluster."
Perhaps the biggest advantage to all of this has been the energy and cost savings Mott has been able to bring to HP. The company says it has been able to cut its networking costs by 50 percent while tripling network bandwidth and update its power and cooling requirements effectively enough to reduce its energy usage by 60 percent. This quite likely contributed to why HP was ranked at the top of the latest "Green Data Center" Vendor Matrix in October by ABI Research.
Not unlike other IT giants like IBM with its well-known "Project Big Green" initiative, HP has been working on popularizing its own Green Business Technology services as well.
In November, HP updated its Thermal Logic portfolio, adding power-capping server technologies and energy-efficiency services designed to reduce operating costs and extend the life of data centers.
According to reports in The Register, Randy Mott, HP's chief information officer, has been able to condense the company's 85 data centers down to "a six pack of three redundant, highly virtualization data centers" over the past three years. The six facilities currently give HP a footprint of 342,000 square feet of floor space, with the ability to expand to more than double its capacity.
Mott, who joined HP in 2005, was behind Dell's massive internal IT consolidation project a few years ago as well, where he squeezed the company's 22 data centers into six highly-efficient facilities with room to spare.
Part of Mott's goals with HP also involved cutting down the company's server count from 25,000 to around 14,000. Although the exact number hasn't been released by the company, HP says it has reduced the number of servers by around 40 percent, which according to The Register, means HP currently has around 15,000 boxes.
HP says it has also cut its 6,000-strong application portfolio down to around 1,500 and became the first customer for its NonStop-based Neoview data warehouse product, which was introduced in April 2007. Through this part of the project, "HP has consolidated 762 data warehouses and data marts down to a single data warehouse running on a Neoware NonStop cluster."
Perhaps the biggest advantage to all of this has been the energy and cost savings Mott has been able to bring to HP. The company says it has been able to cut its networking costs by 50 percent while tripling network bandwidth and update its power and cooling requirements effectively enough to reduce its energy usage by 60 percent. This quite likely contributed to why HP was ranked at the top of the latest "Green Data Center" Vendor Matrix in October by ABI Research.
Not unlike other IT giants like IBM with its well-known "Project Big Green" initiative, HP has been working on popularizing its own Green Business Technology services as well.
In November, HP updated its Thermal Logic portfolio, adding power-capping server technologies and energy-efficiency services designed to reduce operating costs and extend the life of data centers.
Reads: 2478 | Category: General | Source: TheWHIR : Web Host Industry Reviews
URL source: http://www.thewhir.com/marketwatch/120208_HP_Trims_IT_Infrastructure_Saves_1B.cfm
Want to add a website news or press release ? Just do it, it's free! Use add web hosting news!
📅 -
📅 -