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Autonomic Computing - Tomorrow's technology, today
Why Autonomic
Computing?
What is Autonomic
Computing?
The State of Autonomic
Computing
Nitix, the World's
First Autonomic Server Operating System
Why
Autonomic Computing?
As quickly as computer technology
has advanced, so has the cost and complexity of deploying,
managing and maintaining that technology. However, today's
economic environment is forcing businesses to demand a real
return on technology investments.
To
address this paradox, several leading IT vendors are starting
to look for ways to manage increasingly complex IT infrastructures
so that customers can get back to focusing on the benefits
technology brings to their business, rather than the technology
itself. While still a mere vision that is thought to be eight
to 10 years away, one ideology calls for the development of
autonomic computing: computer systems that configure and manage
themselves, automatically diagnose and fix their own problems,
and figure out how to protect themselves in the future, thereby
greatly reducing the cost and complexity of IT infrastructure.
What
is Autonomic Computing?
IBM Corporation defines Autonomic
Computing as an approach to self-managed computing systems
with a minimum of human interference. The term derives from
the body's autonomic nervous system, which controls key functions
without conscious awareness or involvement.
Autonomic Computing systems
are systems which are self-managed (adjust itself according
to workload demands), self-healing (detect, diagnose and repair
problems), self-configuring (automatically incorporate and
configure new components), self-optimizing (performance tuning),
and self-protecting (anticipate and defend against security
breaches) resulting in ultra-reliable, robust, yet dynamically
flexible systems.
The
State of Autonomic Computing
The
research departments at several organizations, including IBM
Autonomic Computing, Microsoft .NET, Sun N1 and HP Adaptive
Infrastructure, have just recently started initiatives to
focus on autonomic and next generation computing. Net Integration
Technologies has been developing and delivering award-winning,
next generation Autonomic Computing technology since 1997.
Nitix, the World's
First Autonomic Server Operating System
Nitix is the first server operating
system in the world that satisfies the criteria of an autonomic
computing system:
Self-managing: Adjusting
itself according to workload demands
On a Nitix-powered server,
if an administrator changes the configuration of a particular
service, Nitix automatically updates affected subsystems.
For example, firewall and DNS parameters are automatically
(and correctly) updated, when an administrator makes his web
server public. NetIntelligence is the unique technology that
enables Nitix's self-managing capabilities.
Self-healing: Detecting,
diagnosing and repairing problems
Nitix is able to detect and
correct problems that on other servers would result in downtime,
and then human intervention to remedy. NetIntelligence is
the unique technology that enables Nitix's self-healing capabilities.
Self-configuring: Automatically
incorporating and configuring new components
When setting up a new Nitix-powered
server, Nitix automatically detects and configures standard
networking parameters. When adding new users to Nitix-powered
server, Nitix automatically creates a personal directory,
an email account and a personal webpage for each user. By
automating many standard server configuration tasks, Nitix-powered
servers allow our Approved Partners to focus on customizations
that are specific to the unique business requirements of their
end-user customers. NetIntelligence is the unique technology
that enables Nitix's self-configuring capabilities.
Self-protecting: Anticipating
and defending against security breaches
Based on the requirements of
the end-user customer and their local-area network, Nitix-powered
servers automatically erect and configure secure firewalls.
Nitix-powered servers also have the ability to detect and
evade malicious external attacks. If a foreign program should
attempt to modify the Nitix operating system, Nitix will automatically
write-over that attempted change.
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