How to convert your datacenter into a formula1 race car

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How to convert your datacenter to a Formula 1 race car IT infrastructures have changed considerably over the last decade. Aside from the technology evolution (or should that be revolution?), the role that they are being asked to fulfill now demands more from hardware, software and applications. This, in turn, has had a significant impact on the role of average IT teams. A good analogy to look at will be how motor racing has evolved over the years. Think of your IT infrastructure as a racing car. Your datacenter is the chassis, the servers are your business' engines, the power supply is the fuel and your business applications are the transmission that drives the business. Your IT team is the pit crew that makes sure your racing car is optimized for maximum performance. In the 1950s, the pit crew relied on only one source of data – the driver – to provide them with critical information about the car's performance as it raced around the track. When the driver came in for a pit stop he would communicate to the crew what was wrong with the car – more air in the left front tire, change the fuel mix, adjust the back wing to increase down force, and so on. This approach created a number of challenges for pit crews in the 1950s. The data they received was not very scientific. It was from a single source, based on subjective perceptions, and therefore lacked any real accuracy. As a result, the changes they made were just as likely to diminish performance by creating a new problem elsewhere on the car. This approach was very reactive – changes could only be made halfway through a race, rather than while the car was still on the grid – limiting their effectiveness on overall performance. How does this relate to modern IT infrastructures? Consider the complexity of a Formula 1 racing car and the evolution in its performance since the 1950s. Modern IT infrastructures mirror this development. Businesses have focused on performance without tackling the complexity – akin to asking a 1950s mechanic to make changes to a modern Ferrari using the Haynes manual for his Fiat 500. Sounds impossible? Effectively, this is what many businesses are asking their IT teams to do.


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