On mySimon: North Face Elkhorn 0 Degree Sleeping Bag
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

January 12th, 2009

Marthon teams up with Microsoft

Posted by Dan Kusnetzky @ 3:00 am

Categories: HA/Failover, Virtual machine software

Tags: Team, Fault-tolerance, Marathon Technologies, Microsoft Corp., Dan Kusnetzky

While at Citrix’s mega analyst event a while back, I saw a fantastic demonstration of both HA and fault tolerant configurations using Marathon Technologies‘ everRun combined with Citrix’s XenServer. Well, the folks at Marathon are doing it again, this time with Microsoft and Hyper-V.  What Marathon has accomplished is shear industrial sorcery.

Here’s what they had to say about the partnership

Microsoft Corp. and Marathon Technologies Corporation today announced a development and marketing agreement designed to address the fault tolerant and high availability computing needs for business customers running Windows Server-based applications in enterprise information technology departments and data centers. The collaboration is focused in three areas:

  • Provide customers who deploy Windows Server 2008 and Marathon everRun software a seamless path to extend high availability protection to their critical applications.
  • Provide Windows Server and Marathon everRun customers with the ability to select the appropriate level of availability, from failover clustering all the way up to system fault tolerance, for each application.
  • Allow customers deploying a future version of Hyper-V, Microsoft’s hypervisor-based virtualization technology, to use Marathon everRun for a fault-tolerant virtual infrastructure.

Snapshot analysis

One of the things holding some organizations back in the move towards deploying virtual servers has been concerns about availability and reliability of the workloads that have been consolidated on a single industry standard server.  This “put all your eggs in one basket” approach could certainly raise some concerns to those needing very highly available or fault tolerant solutions.

In the past, the choices have been to purchase someone’s orchestration/automation solution, purchase expensive fault tolerant hardware or accept lower levels of uptime and use some other solution.  Marathon plus either Microsoft or Citrix is a different, more cost effective, way to achieve the same thing.

I was impressed with how simple this software is to install and manage. Even an analyst could do it. Furthermore, Marathon is going to plug their management software into Microsoft’s. IT administrators who are already trained in Microsoft’s tools will find it easy to manage HA or totally fault tolerant configurations.

If your organization needs this level of availability, but doesn’t want to pay for fault tolerant hardware, this might be the solution for you.

Dan KusnetzkyDaniel Kusnetzky is a member of the senior management team of The 451 Group. He is responsible for research and publications on a broad array of technology topics. He examines emerging technology trends, vendor strategies, research and development issues, and end-user integration requirements. You can follow Dan on Twitter. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.

Email Dan Kusnetzky

Subscribe to Virtually Speaking via Email alerts or RSS.

Talkback

Add your opinion

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

Click Here
advertisement

Recent Entries

Premier Vendor Content Whitepapers, webcasts & resources from our Power Center Sponsors
advertisement

Archives

ZDNet Blogs

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

  • Smart Tech Expert advice on innovations in healthcare and the green technologies that make it happen. Find out more
  • Smart Business Discussion and advice on management issues that revolve around making your world smarter and more useful. More Smart Advice
  • Smart People The best and worst moves in the management and strategy trenches. Learn More