...Across Distributed Enterprises
PALO ALTO, Calif., Nov. 6 /PRNewswire/ -- VMware, Inc., the global
leader in software for industry-standard virtualized desktops and
servers, today introduced VMware Lab Manager, which enables enterprise
software development organizations to more efficiently utilize software
development and test lab assets, accelerate software development cycles
and increase the quality of delivered software products.
"VMware is committed to bringing products to market that harness the
power and flexibility of VMware Infrastructure to transform and enhance
our customers' most critical IT processes," said Dan Chu, vice
president of emerging products and markets at VMware. "VMware Lab
Manager leverages VMware Infrastructure to simplify and streamline the
software lifecycle, automating the setup, capture, storage and sharing
of multi-machine software configurations and making them available on
demand to development and test teams through a self-service portal."
VMware Lab Manager is optimized for use in the development, test and
integration stages of an organization's software lifecycle process,
complementing VMware VirtualCenter, which supports the
production-oriented stages of the process: staging, deployment and
management of production software systems. These products together
leverage the power and flexibility of VMware Infrastructure to provide
the only complete, closed-loop software lifecycle automation framework
that enables efficient, bi-directional management and movement of
complex multi-machine software configurations through all stages of the
software lifecycle. Users of the product can be local or remote to the
VMware Lab Manager installation, enabling customers with remote
development and test teams to share lab assets and machine images.
"Traditionally, one of the nagging points of application lifecycle
solutions has been their inability to provide an effective 'handshake'
between the development and production sides of the house, resulting in
broken communication and hobbled processes," said Theresa Lanowitz,
founder and CEO of analyst firm voke. "Offerings that are capable of
providing a closed-loop framework for unifying IT tasks and teams
across the software lifecycle supply a truly unique and innovative way
of delivering more value to the organization."
VMware Lab Manager extends the power of VMware Infrastructure with these benefits:
- Reduced development and test lab capital and lower operating costs. VMware Lab Manager uses a shared pool of server, networking and other software lab resources and allocates them to teams on an as-needed basis. This improves on commonly employed fixed and static resource allocation strategies that do not map to the ebb and flow of development activity across teams and projects and result in suboptimal asset utilization.
- Faster software development cycles. VMware Lab Manager eliminates manual system setup and provisioning tasks. This increases the productivity of IT operations and development teams, which no longer are saddled with tedious and time-consuming tasks and instead can focus resources onhigher-value activities.
- Improved software quality. Even when relying on well-written bug reports, software defects often are difficult to reproduce and fix because of differences in the environment and state of systems across test and development organizations. VMware Lab Manager solves this with"closed-loop" defect reporting, troubleshooting and resolution. VMware Lab Manager takes snapshots of complex multi-machine configurations,captures them to a shared library and assigns them a LiveLink URL that QA engineers can flag and enter into a bug report. A developer then can click on the LiveLink URL to gain instant access to the multi-machine environment in the precise state captured by QA and fix the bug. This seamless sharing of the actual defect environment reduces the time required to reproduce, troubleshoot and correct the reported bug.
- Flexible and secure outsourcing. VMware Lab Manager provides secure remote access to a software lab that can host remote developer desktops and provide remote access to shared complex lab configurations. This eliminates the time-consuming and costly replication of equipment in offshore or outsourcing partner labs, and it provides flexibility to rapidly add, remove or replace outsourced resources as business requirements change. In addition, intellectual property remains secure because it stays within the VMware Lab Manager environment rather than being replicated to offsite facilities.
"In our initial deployment of VMware Lab Manager we have seen the
ability to dramatically improve utilization of servers in our
development and test lab and speed up our development cycles," said
James Rosikiewicz, manager of network services, information technology
at Princeton Softech, a provider of enterprise data management
solutions. "For instance, we'll no longer need to manually copy disk
files and cobble together the multi-machine software environments
needed by our development and test team. Instead, these users can now
instantly make and use copies of pre-installed and setup environments,
which translate to huge time savings and the ability for everyone to
focus on higher value activities."
Pricing and Availability
VMware Lab Manager went into a private beta in the third quarter of
this year, and the public beta version is now available for immediate
download at http://www.vmware.com/products/labmanager/.
VMware Lab Manager is expected to be generally available in December
2006. A la carte prices for VMware Lab Manager Server will start at
$15,000 and list prices for VMware Lab Manager bundled with VMware
Infrastructure 3 will start at $35,000.
About VMware, Inc.
VMware, an EMC company (NYSE:EMC)
, is the global leader in virtual infrastructure software for
industry-standard systems. The world's largest companies use VMware
solutions to simplify their IT, fully leverage their existing computing
investments and respond faster to changing business demands. VMware is
based in Palo Alto, California. For more information, visit
www.vmware.com or call 650-475-5000.
NOTE: VMware is a registered trademark or trademark of VMware, Inc.
in the United States and/or other jurisdictions. All other marks and
names mentioned herein may be trademarks of their respective companies.
This release contains "forward-looking statements" as defined under
the Federal Securities Laws. Actual results could differ materially
from those projected in the forward-looking statements as a result of
certain risk factors, including but not limited to: (i) adverse changes
in general economic or market conditions; (ii) delays or reductions in
information technology spending; (iii) risks associated with
acquisitions and investments, including the challenges and costs of
integration, restructuring and achieving anticipated synergies; (iv)
competitive factors, including but not limited to pricing pressures and
new product introductions; (v) the relative and varying rates of
product price and component cost declines and the volume and mixture of
product and services revenues; (vi) component and product quality and
availability; (vii) the transition to new products, the uncertainty of
customer acceptance of new product offerings and rapid technological
and market change; (viii) insufficient, excess or obsolete inventory;
(ix) war or acts of terrorism; (x) the ability to attract and retain
highly qualified employees; (xi) fluctuating currency exchange rates;
and (xii) other one-time events and other important factors disclosed
previously and from time to time in EMC's filings with the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission. EMC and VMware disclaim any
obligation to update any such forward-looking statements after the date
of this release.
Source: VMware, Inc.
CONTACT: Amber Rowland of VMware, Inc., +1-650-842-9519, or
arowland@vmware.com; or Andrew Schmitt of OutCast Communications,
+1-415-392-8282, ext. 706, or andrew@outcastpr.com, for VMware
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