Complements Citrix XenDesktop to provide an end-to-end virtualization
solution and an enhanced virtual desktop experience for approximately
12,000 students and 1,000 employees
May 3, 2011 (Business Wire) -- DataCore Software, the industry's premier provider of storage virtualization software, today announced that Scottsdale Community College (SCC) has deployed DataCore's SANsymphony™ storage virtualization software in conjunction with XenDesktop from Citrix in order to realize a fully virtualized IT environment. The responsiveness of virtualized environments – and in particular – the virtual desktop infrastructure (VDI), is closely tied to the availability and performance of the underlying storage systems.
DataCore SANsymphony and Citrix run with server hardware from HP and storage hardware from Xiotech. Collectively, they power the mySCC (my Scottsdale Community College) virtualized environment. With mySCC's virtualization strategy, Scottsdale Community College has significantly reduced the total costs of its IT operations by $250,000, while increasing the number of services offered and dramatically improving access to them through a richer, more powerful desktop interface. The full case study is available on DataCore's website: Virtual Storage Infrastructure Designed for Virtual Desktops.
"DataCore front-ends our Xiotech storage arrays and actually improves I/O performance," said Dustin Fennell, vice president of IT and CIO, Scottsdale Community College. "And next year, if we get a better hardware option in terms of price-performance – we can hang that behind DataCore too. By embracing total virtualization of servers, desktops and storage, the college is now saving a quarter million dollars a year that would have been spent on hardware had we not deployed best-of-breed virtualization solutions from DataCore and Citrix."
A Complete Virtual IT Environment Powered by DataCore and Citrix
DataCore's SANsymphony software enables institutions of higher learning, such as SCC, to use their existing storage equipment and devices to achieve the robust and responsive shared storage infrastructure necessary to support highly dynamic virtual IT environments, including desktops. This contrasts sharply with the alternative "rip and replace" approach, which is often prohibitively expensive and results in a rigid infrastructure that cannot adapt to future storage needs.
DataCore software runs on HP DL 380 servers and these DataCore storage virtualization nodes connect to Xiotech Emprise 5000 hardware. The combination of Citrix's unique provisioning technology and DataCore's storage virtualization software dramatically reduces demands on storage and improves performance significantly – giving users maximum availability and performance from their virtual desktops.