Town government simplifies IT with OmniCube hyperconverged infrastructure to deliver mission-critical applications
---nyse--hpe_1.jpg)
Customer Company Size
Mid-size Company
Region
- America
Country
- United States
Product
- OmniCube CN-3000
Tech Stack
- Windows Server 2012R2, 2008R2, 2008
- Microsoft SQL Server 2012, SQL Server 2005
- Oracle 10g/11g
- Citrix XenApp 6.5
Implementation Scale
- Enterprise-wide Deployment
Impact Metrics
- Cost Savings
- Productivity Improvements
Technology Category
- Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) - Cloud Computing
Applicable Industries
- Cities & Municipalities
Applicable Functions
- Business Operation
Use Cases
- Infrastructure Inspection
- Public Transportation Management
Services
- Cloud Planning, Design & Implementation Services
About The Customer
The Town of Newington, population of 30,000, is located just south of Hartford, Connecticut. The town’s dedicated IT team of five provides 24/7/365 services for 21 different departments, including public safety. The IT department consists of two on-campus data centers, with 200 full-time users and multiple applications. Like many town IT departments, providing seamless, efficient service to police, fire, and EMS services, and transparent access to information for all citizens has always been a priority for the Newington team.
The Challenge
The Town of Newington’s IT department faced an infrastructure that was becoming increasingly complicated. As the IT environment continued to expand, more ports, connectivity, interconnects, and cabling meant that the team of five was fighting a constant uphill battle when trying to diagnose system issues. In addition to this, the Town of Newington’s host count was growing along with the VM app and storage growth. The team’s two data centers were quickly running out of space, and with nine out of 15 possible TB used up, it was only a matter of time before further scaling would be necessary. The town’s backup and DR capabilities had grown outdated and required an upgrade. For years, Newington had been using IBM TSM and a complex, manual LTO tape rotation process for backup and DR. However, upgrading this system would have entailed a complete restructure of the backup solution and reconfiguration of all backup jobs. The IT team was tasked with finding the best virtualized, automated platform that would offer disruption-free backup and DR with minimized upkeep.
The Solution
After careful consideration, the IT department elected to look for a new, hyperconverged infrastructure that would provide disruptive-free backup and easy scalability, all while saving space and reducing complexity in the IT environment. The team chose the OmniCube Data Virtualization Platform for its integrated VMware management features, hyperconverged infrastructure with data efficiency and easy scalability. After a short, painless installation, the Newington IT team moved all of its production servers from the HP Server and LeftHand storage over to the new, hyperconverged OmniCubes within its data centers. In doing so, storage went from about 10TB used to 5.9 through inline deduplication and compression alone—a 40 percent automatic efficiency improvement. For DR, the team now does rapid backups with the OmniCubes in addition to a Unitrends, disk-based system already in place—a major step up from the previous LTO tape system. This method will be easily scalable in the future. Additionally, the Town of Newington expects to leverage OmniCube support for cost effective, secure, off-site backup to the cloud whereby they can treat the cloud as an extension of the data center to reduce cost and increase agility.
Operational Impact
Quantitative Benefit
Case Study missing?
Start adding your own!
Register with your work email and create a new case study profile for your business.
Related Case Studies.

Case Study
Turning A Stadium Into A Smart Building
Honeywell created what it called the “intelligent system” for the National Stadium in Beijing, China, turning the venue for the opening and closing events at the 2008 Summer Olympics into a “smart building.” Designed by highly controversial artist Ai Weiwei, the “Bird’s Nest” remains one of the most impressive feats of stadium architecture in the world. The 250,000 square meter structure housed more than 100,000 athletes and spectators at a time. To accommodate such capacity, China turned to Honeywell’s EBI Integrated Building Management System to create an integrated “intelligent system” for improved building security, safety and energy efficiency.
.png)
Case Study
Smart Street Light Network (Copenhagen)
Key stakeholders are taking a comprehensive approach to rethinking smart city innovation. City leaders have collaborated through partnerships involving government, research institutions and solution providers. The Copenhagen Solutions Lab is one of the leading organizations at the forefront of this movement. By bringing together manufacturers with municipal buyers, the Copenhagen Solutions Lab has catalyzed the development and deployment of next-generation smart city innovations. Copenhagen is leveraging this unique approach to accelerate the implementation of smart city solutions. One of the primary focus areas is LED street lighting.

Case Study
Buoy Status Monitoring with LoRa
The Netherlands are well-known for their inland waterways, canals, sluices and of course port activities. The Dutch Ministry of Infrastructure indicates that there are thousands of buoys and fixed items in and near water environments that would profit from IoT monitoring. One of the problems with buoys for example, is that they get hit by ships and the anchor cable breaks. Without connectivity, it takes quite some time to find out that something has happened with that buoy. Not to mention the costs of renting a boat to go to the buoy to fix it. Another important issue, is that there is no real-time monitoring of the buoys at this moment. Only by physically visiting the object on the water, one gains insight in its status.

Case Study
Barcelona Case Study
Barcelona’s heavy traffic and its associated high levels of pollution were the primary factors that motivated some companies and universities to work on strategies for improving traffic in the city centre. Bitcarrier is one of the technologies involved in the In4Mo Project, whose main objective is to develop the applications that form the core of smart mobility, one of the fundamental pillars of the smart city concept.

Case Study
China Mobile Smart Parking
Smart Parking, powered by NB-IoT technology, is making it easier for drivers to find free parking spots. Cities can better manage their parking assets and maximize the revenue available to them as a result. Drivers searching for parking create congestion and pollution by circling and hunting for available parking. Smart Parking services are able to significantly ease these problems by guiding a driver directly to a parking space.