Intelligent Workload Management

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What Does Intelligent Workload Management Mean?

Intelligent workload management (IWM) is a relatively new offshoot of the general principle of workload management, which involves distributing computing and input/output tasks across a complex network. With IWM, new advancements allow for some types of automation and sophisticated workload handling for modern cloud, hybrid or multi-platform systems.

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Techopedia Explains Intelligent Workload Management

Some IT experts describe IWM as a system where the workload itself is imbued with some types of native intelligence, for example, an understanding of security needs and processing bandwidth, or of where the resources are in the network.

In general, IWM applies to systems that have become much more complicated and need much more active workload management. Where traditional systems may have worked with basic workload management that directed data-handling tasks between several servers, many of today’s systems are interlinked hardware and virtualized systems that route data traffic across different platforms and through in-house networks, public or private cloud networks, and other segments of the general IT architecture.

Intelligent workload management advances the process of figuring out where workload handling can be done, whether it is on a physical server, in a virtual resource or in the cloud. Much of the direction that IWM provides has to do with deployment in or out of the cloud, although system administrators also use these types of resources to determine the necessary CPU and memory for I/O on different parts of an internal network.

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Margaret Rouse
Technology Expert
Margaret Rouse
Technology Expert

Margaret é uma premiada redatora e professora conhecida por sua habilidade de explicar assuntos técnicos complexos para um público empresarial não técnico. Nos últimos vinte anos, suas definições de TI foram publicadas pela Que em uma enciclopédia de termos tecnológicos e citadas em artigos do New York Times, Time Magazine, USA Today, ZDNet, PC Magazine e Discovery Magazine. Ela ingressou na Techopedia em 2011. A ideia de Margaret de um dia divertido é ajudar os profissionais de TI e de negócios a aprenderem a falar os idiomas altamente especializados uns dos outros.