Dell Technologies, in collaboration with Microsoft, today unveiled a platform that tightly integrates an on-premises IT environment with the Azure cloud.
Caitlin Gordon, vice president of multi-cloud product management for Dell Technologies, said the Dell APEX Cloud Platform for Microsoft Azure is the first instance of a hybrid cloud computing platform designed specifically to address that requirement using a Premier Solution of the Microsoft Azure Stack hyperconverged infrastructure (HCI) platform that Microsoft added to its portfolio today.
The Premier Edition of Microsoft Azure Stack HCI makes available an instance of that platform that provides a more turnkey management experience than the existing editions, said Gordon.
In the face of increased economic headwinds, more organizations are looking to lower the total cost of managing IT by reducing the number of control planes that need to be managed. Each platform that an IT team typically supports today has its own control plane that requires IT staff to manage it. Reducing the number of control planes creates an opportunity to reduce the total headcount currently required to manage multiple IT platforms.
It also serves to streamline workflows in a way that enables DevOps teams to reduce the current level of friction encountered when managing multiple IT platforms, noted Gordon.
At the core of Microsoft’s approach to hybrid cloud computing that Dell is embracing is Arc, a management framework that makes it possible to manage Azure cloud instances alongside on-premises IT environments. In terms of the ability to manage hybrid cloud computing environments, Microsoft is significantly more advanced than any other cloud service provider, said Gordon.
It’s not clear whether IT organizations are embracing HCI platforms running an instance of the same core stack of software that Microsoft relies on to provide Azure services. If IT organizations expect to lower the cost of managing IT, there is no doubt they will need to modernize on-premises IT infrastructure. The older the platform, the more expensive it becomes to automate using various third-party frameworks.
Regardless of the approach, IT teams need to reconcile the need to invest in automating workflows that span multiple IT platforms. Over time, those investments will reduce the total cost of IT, but getting the required funding to start that process will require IT teams to make a strong case for increasing the return on investment (ROI).
In the meantime, the number of workloads running both in the cloud and at the network edge is only going to increase. At the same time, the bulk of existing workloads continue to run in local data center environments. Most IT teams will be required to find additional ways to automate the management of all those environments simply because the cost of adding additional IT staff to manage highly distributed computing environments as scale will otherwise be prohibitive.
As such, the issues that IT teams are facing today may be a matter of not if the management of IT will become more automated but how soon.