IBM Takes Sheldon B. Lubar School of Business to the Cloud
Notably with XIV storage system
This is a Press Release edited by StorageNewsletter.com on June 28, 2011 at 3:30 pm
IBM Corporation announced that the Sheldon B. Lubar School of Business at the University
of Wisconsin-Milwaukee selected IBM software and hardware to automate and
consolidate its data center operations to enable a cloud-based service for
delivering SAP-based courses to students.
The school switched its system from
Oracle and Dell products to IBM cloud-ready infrastructure and software to
deliver faster services with lower administration costs and greater energy
efficiency. Specifically, this announcement demonstrates the school’s move to a computing environment that will extract greater economics and
performance from its technology infrastructure.
As an SAP University Competence Center (UCC), the University
of Wisconsin-Milwaukee’s Center for Technology Innovation (CTI) acts as an
education service provider, hosting a range of SAP systems for educational
purposes on its campus and virtually to more than 105 universities across North
America. SAP software is used to reinforce and supplement classroom content for
more than 40,000 students with 1,450 courses per year, preparing them for
post-graduation employment. Students from a variety of academic disciplines
participate in the program with classes ranging from accounting and information
systems to retail merchandising and supply chain management.
In 2009, the school’s Sun hardware needed to be updated and
when Oracle acquired the company that year, changes in their relationship led
the UCC to investigate alternative hardware partners. The University of
Wisconsin-Milwaukee UCC decided to migrate its data center to
workload-optimized IBM POWER7 and System x servers, XIV Storage System and
DB2 database software to support the SAP program.
"There has been a significant performance improvement
with the IBM system," said Professor Dave Haseman, the UCC director in
charge of the data center that supports the 750 teaching faculty members in the
program. "Each semester, we set up and manage 25 to 30 instances of SAP on
our servers and the set up alone for an SAP client could take up to 24 hours to
complete with Oracle. In comparison, it only takes us three hours with the IBM
system."
"In addition, the training and technology transfer
process with the IBM team has been exceptional," continued Haseman.
"They are willing to be adaptable and are quick to share better ways of
doing things and transfer as many skills as possible to us."
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee is the second SAP
University Competence Center to migrate its infrastructure to IBM hardware and
software. The University Competence Center at Technische Universitaet Muenchen
(TUM) in Germany offers educational institutions and their students throughout
Europe, the Middle East and Africa access to SAP applications and services for
research and teaching assignments. The Center at TUM, led by Professor Krcmar,
supports more than 28,000 students at 153 universities with IBM POWER7 servers,
XIV Storage System and DB2 database software. TUM migrated in 2010 and the
universities are collaborating to optimize technical performance and design
innovative approaches to the curriculum.