Microsoft puts a new face on MOM

MOM has received a makeover, but Microsoft Corp. promises IT managers they’ll still be able to recognize her.

The Redmond, Wash.-based computer giant released System Center Operations Manager 2007 at the company’s annual Management Summit in San Diego last month.

Previously known as Microsoft Operations Manager (MOM), the updated network monitoring software is being released as part of a new enterprise platform called Microsoft System Center.

Operations Manager is designed to help clients work with increasingly complex network infrastructure and to streamline network processes.

“Systems management is a very key area. Keeping the systems up and running is a very important aspect to any organization now,” said Derick Wong, senior product manager for security and management at Microsoft Canada Corp.

“Being able to understand what’s happening on the network and do proactive maintenance and solve problems is key,” he said. Operations Manager 2007 tracks the health of applications across operating systems, as well as automating auditing procedures and managing distributed applications across networks. Wong also said the software offers managers tools to map out a company’s network on a visual interface.

“As networks become more complex, visualization becomes more important. It looks visually like a big net [on Operations Manager],” he said.

Two Canadian firms are already using Operations Manager 2007. One company representative said the software has helped his company manage its network in a holistic manner.

“Service oriented monitoring allowed us to group those services specifically and monitor those items by the entire application,” said Aidan Cahill, senior systems administrator for the server infrastructure group of Direct Energy Inc. in Toronto.

“The auditing is a great feature. Gathering those security logs that you choose to audit and have it all go into a security application and review that data in an easy-to-understand format is great,” Cahill said.

A representative of Cineplex Entertainment LP said the Toronto company’s adoption of Operations Manager is critical in managing servers across a spread-out network of business outlets across Canada. “There are servers in every one of our locations that MOM is monitoring – they’re critical for point-of-sale operations and it’s very disruptive if it goes down,” said Jeff Kent, chief technical officer.

t helps us at the server administration level and from a time perspective, it saves us a lot of resources.” One Microsoft system partner supports Operations Manager as a potential cost-saving measure for businesses.

“If I can reduce the amount of screens I have to look at (with Operations Manager), that makes the company money. I make money by helping users do their job,” said Andy Papadopoulos, chief executive officer of LegendCorp.

Operations Manager may help network managers looking for simpler ways to understand their company’s network health, one analyst said.

“Clients have been clamouring for management tools giving a single-pane-of-glass view. For the longest time you’d have a single console to check how your network infrastructure was doing. Being able to consolidate all that into a single view is nice to see,” said Ross Armstrong, senior research analyst at Info-Tech Research Group.

“The main driver is efficiency and for IT professionals in general to identify system problems wherever they may occur,” he said. Armstrong has some reservations about Operations Manager, however. While he said a large number of MOM 2005 customers will likely upgrade, he’s concerned about companies locking into Microsoft with the purchase of Operations Manager without best-of-breed options being available for customers to use, given many enterprises’ continued use of third-party vendors for their network monitoring software.

“Microsoft was very slow to come to the table with management tools. In the years it took them to bring them to market, other vendors had been creating perfectly good tools like HP Openview as well that enterprises had adopted to manage their Microsoft environments,” he said.

“Operations Manager is really the only one of the new tools that has been around for any amount of time. Still, it’s going to be a difficult road for Microsoft to pitch the value of tools.”

Pricing for Operations Manager is US$573 for the full application, server and client management, while Operations Manager with SQL Server is priced at $1,307 per license. The firm is aiming the product at upper mid-market clients and large-scale enterprises with a release date near the end of April. 075575

Would you recommend this article?

Share

Thanks for taking the time to let us know what you think of this article!
We'd love to hear your opinion about this or any other story you read in our publication.


Jim Love, Chief Content Officer, IT World Canada

Featured Download

Featured Articles

Cybersecurity in 2024: Priorities and challenges for Canadian organizations 

By Derek Manky As predictions for 2024 point to the continued expansion...

Survey shows generative AI is a top priority for Canadian corporate leaders.

Leaders are devoting significant budget to generative AI for 2024 Canadian corporate...

Related Tech News

Tech Jobs

Our experienced team of journalists and bloggers bring you engaging in-depth interviews, videos and content targeted to IT professionals and line-of-business executives.

Tech Companies Hiring Right Now