Oracle® Grid Index Demonstrates Global Accelerated Adoption of Grid Computing
¡ª¡ªFrom Oracle April 6, 2005
Oracle today unveiled the results of its latest Oracle(r)
Grid Index research, which measures global adoption of Grid
Computing technologies. The overall Oracle Grid Index score
for businesses across North America, Europe and Asia Pacific
is 4.41, on a scale of 0 to 10.
The new research builds on last year's European pilot by
providing a global snapshot along with European trend information
on organizations' attitudes about, and adoption of, Grid
Computing. Analysis of underlying indices and comparison
with the overall score of 3.1 unveiled at the European launch
in September 2004 indicates growing progress toward global
adoption of Grid Computing. This year, North America had
the highest score of the three regions (4.50), while Europe
showed considerable advancement (4.39) and Asia Pacific
proved to be well-placed to make rapid progress in adoption
of this ground-breaking technology (4.37). However, the
results showed that no one region enjoys an outstanding
lead on the path to Grid Computing; indeed, the findings
point to a finely balanced race.
Many Organizations Understand Grid; Fewer Are Taking Immediate
Action
While organizations are increasingly aware of Grid Computing
and its benefits, the research, independently conducted
by Quocirca, a leader in Business and IT analysis, suggests
that most have yet to act on this understanding.
* The overall Grid Index values for each region are similar,
indicating that significant numbers of organizations in
each of these regions are assessing, understanding and evaluating
this new technology.
* Overall, knowledge of Grid Computing and awareness of
its benefits are positive (indices are, respectively, 5.61
and 4.89), but this has yet to take the form of equivalent
commitment and achievement or expectation of Return on Investment
(ROI). The Commitment Index is 2.45 and ROI Index is 1.89.
This pattern is typical of the adoption of a new technology
such as Grid Computing.
* Europe's businesses have made progress on the journey
to Grid Computing. The European Oracle Grid Index figure
jumped from 3.1 to 4.39 -- a significant increase in just
six months. Each European country surveyed, and every value
of the sub-indices which are aggregated into the overall
European figure, showed increased index figures.
* The sub-indices for each region show that Europe and
North America exhibit similar overall attitudes toward Grid
Computing. Organizations in Asia Pacific, by contrast, show
markedly different patterns. Standardization and Consolidation
Indices are much higher across much of the Asia Pacific
region than elsewhere, and there is a more marked contrast
between high values for Knowledge and Benefits Awareness
Indices and low values for Commitment and ROI Indices. Thus,
while Asia Pacific lags on adoption, the region appears
much better prepared to potentially standardize on Grid
technologies.
"Visionaries and early adopters of Grid Computing
are already enjoying increased efficiencies in their core
business systems, such as ERP, Supply Chain Management (SCM)
and Customer Relationship Management (CRM)," said Oracle
President Charles Phillips. "The next stage is for
this technology to enter the mainstream. Oracle's Grid Computing
solution leads the industry in terms of its sheer practicality,
and we are working with key partners to make it even more
compelling. Oracle's sights are set on taking Grid Computing
to the masses."
North America Leads Oracle Grid Index
Of the three regions measured, North America (Canada and
United States) demonstrated the highest overall score on
the Oracle Grid Index. North American companies scored particularly
well on knowledge of Grid Computing (6.17) and understanding
of Grid Computing benefits (4.86). North America also leads
the other regions in Commitment (3.02) to the adoption of
Grid Computing technologies.
Other key findings include:
* North America's top score reflects the region's willingness
to embrace new technologies early on;
* North American businesses are putting their knowledge
of Grid Computing into practice today by adopting grid-related
technologies to support mission-critical business systems,
call center applications and online transaction processing
systems, among others;
* Despite its overall lead, North America's scores for standardization
and consolidation are lower than those of Asia Pacific,
leaving the door to global competitive advantage wide open;
* Over 50 percent of Knowledge Leaders surveyed for the
Oracle Grid Index acknowledged blade servers as a key technology
they will deploy over the next 12 months; and
* Over 30 percent of North American companies surveyed will
use or deploy blade servers within their IT infrastructure
in the next 12 months.
"Grid Computing is the natural evolution of IT,"
said Keith Block, executive vice president, North America,
Oracle. "In most cases, the technology is already there.
Grid Computing just takes it to the next level by establishing
consistency, eliminating redundancy and, finally, automating
processes. Consolidation and standardization in the data
center is key - and Oracle is leading the way. Grid is also
effective at supporting Sarbanes Oxley regulatory compliance
requirements. A dedicated node can be added to support the
increasing reporting and auditing needs without adversely
affecting service levels or adding risk."
Global Knowledge Leaders Are Changing the Perception of
Related Technology
Oracle's research also carries useful information about
technologies that are closely related to Grid Computing,
such as Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) and blade servers.
Last September's Oracle Grid Index for Europe showed that
organizations that understand Grid Computing tend to be
thought leaders who drive their companies toward adoption.
Today's research reveals a community of global knowledge
leaders - about 10 percent of all those surveyed - who are
leading the charge in enabling their organizations to achieve
benefits from Grid Computing.
* A large proportion of the Knowledge Leaders surveyed
(86 percent) see the implementation of SOAs by key packaged
application vendors as being of significant benefit from
an interfacing and integration perspective.
* Over 90 percent of companies that are committed to Grid
Computing (Commitment Index > 7.5) are either currently
using SOA methodology to develop new applications or will
be during 2005. For the surveyed companies as a whole, this
figure is less than 20 percent.
* Over half of the Knowledge Leader organizations interviewed
make significant use of blade servers, as opposed to less
than a quarter of the overall population surveyed. For those
companies with high commitment (Commitment Index greater
than 7.5), this figure rises to over 60 percent.
"At Quocirca, we have long seen a strong link between
SOA and Grid Computing," said Clive Longbottom, Research
Director, Quocirca. "Approaching major business problems
in 'bite-sized chunks' is the fastest and most cost-effective
way to implement IT systems that flexibly adapt to changing
business needs. An SOA approach can deliver this most effectively.
Furthermore, this technology enjoys a clear synergy with
Grid Computing, which marshals bite-sized chunks of computing
power into an overall system. Our research, which underpins
the latest Oracle Grid Index, confirms that those in the
know understand and act upon this principle. These Knowledge
Leaders are also moving towards a blade server architecture,
gaining economies with the implementation of compute power
across deployments of Grid Computing systems. Further proof
of such benefits comes from the research: two thirds of
those organizations that are most committed to Grid Computing
are able simply to re-tune and re-balance their IT infrastructure
to address system overloads. Others currently need to re-engineer,
purchase new capacity or simply struggle through."
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