Press and Blog Analysis of Mike Manos's AFCOM keynote

Microsoft's Mike Manos made an amazing presentation at AFCOM's Data Center World, and it was the buzz of the show.  It was fun watching the news spread and the various things written by press and bloggers. I decided to build a relationship mindmap to track the relationships.  DataCenterKnowledge, SearchDataCenter, and DataCenterLinks should be particularly interested in the relationships.

A pdf of the image below is hereDownload mike_manos_afcom_keynote_press_and_blogs.pdf .

DatacenterKnowledge, SearchDataCenter, DataCenterLinks, and EWeek had original reporting which were picked up by others.

DataCenterKnowledge has the widest reference and was picked up by the The Register http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/04/02/microsoft_container_data_center/.  The Register had a home page placement (see attached pdf www.theregister.co.pdf) with an upper left corner placement, and an attention getting graphic and title.

clip_image002Microsoft meths up data center with 220 containers, Redefines the internet superhighway

John Rath’s DataCenter Links interview with Mike was picked up by MS’s James Hamilton and then Mary Jo Foley read James post, creating her own posting http://blogs.zdnet.com/microsoft/?p=1308 with placement on the news zdnet home page (See attached pdf news.zdnet.pdf)

EWeek had reported on Mike’s keynote http://blogs.zdnet.com/microsoft/?p=1308  and had 9,438 article views. Bink.nu picked up on the eWeek article and posted their own entry http://bink.nu/news/microsoft-building-containerized-data-center.aspx.  The Bink.nu article has 110,786 article views.

Mike Manos AFCOM Keynote - Press and Blogs

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Web 2.0 Expo conf goes Green - Reduce, Reuse, Recycle (in that order)

Web 2.0 Expo in SF, April 22 - 25, 2008 writes on how they will be going Green at the conference, and makes the point that Reduce, Reuse, and Recycle are its methods to create a greener event.

Let's hope these ideas will rub off on the Web 2.0 attendees to create Greener Web 2.0 Technologies.

Reduce, Reuse, Recycle (in that order)

It’s a bit hard on the old conscience being employed in an industry that’s creates as much waste as the events industry.  Much is made of the carbon footprint of an event, but I’m well aware of an even more daunting measure, the ecological footprint, which looks at the sum total of resources used.  Take a look at all that goes into producing an event the size of Web 2.0 Expo (including what our sponsors, exhibitors, and speakers bring) and you can either get depressed or try to tackle the problem.  We’re doing both.  ;-)  We have a long way to go, but I thought I’d share some of the changes we’ve implemented this year:

  • Reduced size of the program guide by 1/3
  • Printed the program guide on 100% recycled paper
  • Printed attendee direct mail on 100% recycled paper
  • Conference attendee bags are made with 100% post-consumer recycled materials
  • Bins throughout the building will promote the re-use of gently used program guides (making it possible for us to print fewer, hoping you’ll all share)
  • Event signage is produced on 100% recycled product
  • After the event, signage will be donated to use for art projects and other uses.
  • Aisle carpet is made of 25% post-industrial recycled product, is 100% recyclable and will be used on other events (same goes for carpet used in turnkeys, Long Tail Pavilion and the sales suite)
  • We’re thankful to be holding the event at one of the greenest facilities in the country. This includes heroic recycling efforts and solar panels on the roof. Please find full details here.
  • SMG, the caterer at Moscone, also has significant green programs, including using compostable serveware (when china is not being used), as well as donating unused food to local charities.
  • We have water coolers throughout the building and we encourage attendees to bring water bottles from home to use throughout the conference.
  • Bins will be placed near the exits toward the end of the event to gather badges for recycling
  • Web 2.0 continues not to offer shuttle service for the event; we encourage walking from our nearby hotels and also provide public transportation information on our website.

One thing I’ve become painfully aware of is that recycling is a good step, but not generating the waste in the first place is orders of magnitude more beneficial to the earth.  That’s why “reduce” should always be the real goal.  We’re working with sponsors on further steps for reducing, and with our vendors on all three Rs.  In some areas we’re aware we’re taking risks.  For instance, we’ve tried to limit the print run of the program guide this year, so there’s a chance we’ll run out if people don’t follow our lead and leave their used guides for others to reuse.  We hope you will all be tolerant of any errors we make in support of this effort. 

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Microsoft meths up data center with 220 containers, redefines the internet super-highway

This is interestiing to watch how Microsoft is gaining positive PR in talking about its data centers.  In less than 24 hours, of Mike Manos's keynote he is picked up by data center bloggers, and now The Register writes on this (using Meths to get the attention of its readers) and has the article on the home page is in top left position referring to DataCenterKnowledge and SearchDataCenter.com posts.

The Register ®

image Microsoft meths up data center with 220 containers, Redefines the internet super-highway

Crack open the Natty Light. Microsoft plans to throw a white trash data center rager in Chicago.

Microsoft will cram between 150 and 220 shipping containers filled with data center gear into a new 500,000 square foot facility. This move marks the most significant, public use of the shipping container systems popularized by the likes of Sun Microsystems and Rackable Systems to date.

Microsoft's data center services director Michael Manos revealed the grand plans during a speech at the Data Center World conference in Las Vegas. Fittingly, Data Center Knowledge appears to have grabbed the news first, celebrating Microsoft's ways as the dawn of a new era in compartmentalized, utility computing.

"The entire first floor of Chicago is going to be containers," Manos said. "This represents our first container data center. The containers are going to be dropped off and plugged into network cabling and power.

"It's a bold step forward. We're trying to address scale with the cloud level services. We were trying to figure the best way to bring capacity online quickly."

The second level of Microsoft's data center will stick with the raised floors of yesteryear.

This huge data center build out will aid Microsoft's web-based software delivery efforts. And so the internet super-highway will actually arrive via the physical highway, as Microsoft will rely on large trucks to bring in the gear.

The company has set up a number of centers around the country for similar purposes and is in an arms race of sorts with Google.

Sun and Rackable would appear the most likely suppliers of Microsoft's containers, which we've dubbed white trash data centers much to the chagrin of five Register readers. (This is not a racial slur against white folk but rather an embrace of the Southern, food stamp culture your reporter shares with trailerized people.)

As we read the tea leaves, Sun stands out as Microsoft's data center dealer. That's because Rackable earlier this year said that it only expected to ship between 20 and 50 data center containers in 2008. Surely, the company, already a big hardware supplier to Microsoft, would have tried to show off had it won a 150 container deal.

The containers could afford Microsoft some internal billing and measurement wonderment, according to Manos.

"We're looking at using containers inside our future data centers," he told SearchDataCenter.com. "One of the things we like about them is we can take a bunch of servers and look at the output of that box and look at the power it draws. At the end of the day, we can determine, 'What is the IT productivity of that unit? How many search queries were executed per box? How many emails sent or stored?' You can get into some really interesting metrics. A lot of people say you can't look at the productivity of a data center, but if you compartmentalize it - not as small as the server level, but at some chunk in between - you can measure productivity.

"The data center is a utility function. Everyone uses the common resources without a real understanding of the business impact. I read an article recently that said 30% of IT professionals don't believe power is a challenge, and they're wrong. It's a large component of the operating expenses to running the business. Most of these people aren't exposed to the power bill -- they just don't have the data. If you don't expose how much it costs you to run those facilities, they can't manage to a problem they don't know they have yet. Even if you have a fairly rudimentary chargeback model, once you start measuring it, you can find better ways to measure. I fundamentally believe chargeback has had an effect on Microsoft."

With Yahoo's and Dell's presentation at the Uptime Institute Symposium along with Microsoft, it should be an interesting to watch them maneuver.  Google guys have got to be thinking more about this.

Keynotes will include Microsoft’s chief of data centers, Michael Manos; Dell’s vice president of data center infrastructure, Dr. Albert Esser; and Yahoo’s director of climate and energy strategy, Christina Page, as well as top computing executives from IBM, Intel, Sun Microsystems, VMWare and APC.

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Attendees comment on Mike Manos 's keynote at Data Center World

OK, one more post on Mike Manos's keynote from an attendee.  Seemed worthwhile as it gives a different perspective than datacenterknowledge and searchdatacenter.

The Michael Manos keynote this morning at Data Center World was inspiring. Michael doesn't read off of note cards and you can tell that he not only knows this material inside and out, but that he is passionate about it. I gained a number of things from this talk -- including him mentioning that their new Chicago facility will have upwards of 200 shipping containers pieced together like the RV campsites like I have talked about in previous posts.
Here are my notes from his talk:

  • Microsoft challenges: 15x growth on servers, 9x growth on egress, 15x growth on power, 3x growth on number of data centers.
  • 30% of the audience had active prograMicrosoft to monitor and measure power in their data center
  • Next to nobody in the audience knew what their carbon emissions were for their data center
  • Sustainability regulation 'is' coming ; not if, but when
  • How many are working on green programs? 30% (audience)
  • Industry challenges/minefields:
  1. sustainability reporting & efficiency reporting
  2. data center inventory globally becoming a challenge
  3. increasing power densities at the rack level
  4. power costs
  5. green-washing
  6. expertise shortage
  7. organizational structures
  8. increasing capital cost barriers
  9. innovation hoarding
  10. heterogeneity versus homogeneity mindsets.

And the post goes into more detail and pretty much covers everything Mike presented.

John Rath good notetaking.

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Microsoft’s Mike Manos Sr Director of Data Center Services, speaking engagements

I found the following post on Mike Manos's blog. I've seen plenty of people from HP, Intel, Oracle, Sun, and Yahoo speaking at industry events. Microsoft and Google had a noticeable absence. Given Mike's travels to DC, LV, and Orlando, he'll be local for a lot of people.

I'll work on getting a summary from someone who is attending these events. If any of you do attend, feel free to send me your comments, and I'll add them to a blog entry.

 

03/10/08 - IASA - IT Architect / Regional Conferences 1:45pm - 3pm

Washington, DC

   

 

04/01/08  - Data Center World - Keynote Talk 7:45am - 8:45am

Las Vegas, Nevada

   

 

04/27/08 - Uptime Institute Symposium / Green Enterprise Computing

Orlando. Florida

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