- Cool Yule Tools: 2008 Holiday Gift Guide
- 10 kitchen gadgets for the geek gourmet
- Google admits to violating iPhone development terms
- Smartphone smackdown: Storm vs. iPhone
- Google layoffs: 10,000 jobs being cut
Senior Editor Denise Dubie guides you through the latest developments in management tools and services.
Large enterprise companies that need guaranteed high performance and scalability for their service management applications might want to consider StreamFoundry's software suite that addresses several tenets laid out in ITIL while running on an IBM mainframe.
StreamFoundry this week announced Central Management System (CMS) 3.0, an update to its flagship software that is now available using IBM's DB2 and z/OS. Company officials credit the product's architecture -- the software installs on an existing mainframe -- for enabling the centralization of ITIL-based disciplines including problem, incident, change, configuration and request management.
"We run our applications on the mainframe exclusively. There is no need to install software on mid-tier, distributed or Intel platforms, which enables us to address the management needs of the larger enterprise companies," says Marc Heimlich, vice president of marketing and sales at StreamFoundry. He says by running the software on the mainframe, companies are able to centralize management from the infrastructure level and better support the network, server and application layers. "The result is an improvement in mean-time-to-repair, data integrity and Quality of Service," he says.
The company, which has been in business about five years and shipping product for four, competes with IT service management suites from CA, BMC, HP and IBM. It also counts customers such as Citigroup, Nissan and Scotiabank among its customers.
With release 3.0, StreamFoundry updated its Web-based user interface with Web 2.0 features and added a "Google-like" search capability. The company also added a configuration module that more directly links problem, change, incident and request management to drive speedier impact analysis. Updates reporting capabilities enable end users to include information on people in the configuration database to help associate IT components with specific end users. And this version is integrated with IBM Tivoli Application Dependency Discovery Manager, which will help IT managers collect and reconciler configuration data from the entire enterprise into StreamFoundry's CMDB.
"We run on the mainframe, but our management capabilities address the entire enterprise environment," Heimlich says.
CMS 3.0 is available now. Typical implementations cost about $400,000.
Denise Dubie is senior editor with Network World.
Partner Content
NetScout and analyst Jim Metzler have teamed to deliver a series of IT Briefs on Network and Application Performance Management leveraging research from NetScout’s nGenius & Sniffer users.
www.netscout.com
Metzler on CIO Priorities
The top five CIO priorities based on a survey of NetScout users revealing CIOs' top priorities and what they think they should be. Also includes interviews with CIOs of large organizations.
Read the Report
Metzler on Application Delivery
How to eliminate the stovepiped or siloed nature of application delivery from both an organization and a technological perspective.
Read the Brief
Metzler on Network Troubleshooting
Overview of network troubleshooting that provides an assessment of where we are, and where we need to be relative to the complexities of today's IT challenges.
Read the Brief
Comments (3)
How is Web 2.0 "soBy Anon on October 13, 2008, 5:16 pmHow is Web 2.0 "so 1980's"? If you are referring to a period when IT was much more responsive and adaptable to business requirements - 1980s it is!
Reply | Read entire comment
so 1980sBy Anonymous on July 23, 2008, 6:43 pmso 1980s
Reply | Read entire comment
so 1980sBy Anonymous on July 23, 2008, 6:43 pmso 1980s
Reply | Read entire comment
View all comments