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VMware Platform Helps Independence Blue Cross Improve Performance and System Reliability
[October 21, 2008]

VMware Platform Helps Independence Blue Cross Improve Performance and System Reliability


PALO ALTO, Calif., Oct 21, 2008 (BUSINESS WIRE) --
VMware, Inc. (NYSE:VMW), the global leader in virtualization solutions
from the desktop to the datacenter, today announced that Independence
Blue Cross (IBC), the largest health insurer in Philadelphia, is using
VMware's industry-leading datacenter
virtualization and management suite, VMware Infrastructure 3, to improve
the efficiency of its business operations.
IBC covers 3.4 million members and processes more than 32 million claims
each year. As the company has grown, IBC found its computing environment
becoming increasingly cumbersome and expensive to maintain. Server
sprawl was eating up space and increasing power consumption at
unsustainable levels, and the cost of acquiring and managing so much
hardware was pushing IT budgets to the limit. To reverse these trends
and take control of its infrastructure, IBC turned to VMware.
"We needed a cost-effective solution that
would manage server sprawl, and ensure we had a high-performance
application environment that could handle our business as it grew,"
said Michael Garber, director, distributed infrastructure, at
Independence Blue Cross. "VMware met these
needs. In fact, the performance of many of our Microsoft applications
have actually improved since we started running them on the VMware
platform. The product has paid for itself in less than 16 months and
helped us avoid more than $1 million in hardware costs."
IBC has virtualized approximately 70 percent of its Windows-based
applications, including business-critical systems involving claims
authorization and processing, billing, and member enrollments. Specific
applications that have been virtualized include Active Directory,
Exchange, SharePoint and SQL Server as well as PeopleSoft and Oracle 9i.
"We now have 386 virtual machines running on
48 physical hosts," said Garber. "We've
increased our processor utilization from 5 percent to 75 percent, and we
still have extra horsepower to add more virtual machines."
VMware DRS and VMotion -- unique VMware capabilities -- aggregate
hardware resources into logical resource pools and dynamically allocate
them to applications that need them most. When a virtual machine
experiences an increased load, VMware DRS automatically allocates
additional resources by redistributing virtual machines among the
physical servers in the resource pool. The live migration of virtual
machines across the resource pools is executed by VMotion.
About VMware
VMware (NYSE:VMW) is the global leader in virtualization solutions from
the desktop to the datacenter. Customers of all sizes rely on VMware to
reduce capital and operating expenses, ensure business continuity,
strengthen security and go green. With 2007 revenues of $1.3 billion,
more than 120,000 customers and nearly 18,000 partners, VMware is one of
the fastest growing public software companies. Headquartered in Palo
Alto, California, VMware is majority-owned by EMC Corporation (NYSE:EMC)
and on the web at www.vmware.com.
VMware is a registered trademark or trademark of VMware, Inc. in the
United States and/or other jurisdictions. All other marks and names
mentioned herein may be trademarks of their respective companies.
SOURCE: VMware, Inc.

VMware Public Relations
Mary Ann Gallo, 650-427-3271
[email protected]
or
Outcast Communications for VMware
Reema Bahnasy, 415-345-4760
[email protected]

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