When People Leave, will they Go Back?

We are seeing more data center executive movement than at any other time.  Well at least the press is writing about the movement of Yahoo and Microsoft data center executives.

News.com just posted about Adobe reclaiming Photoshop guru Mark Hamburg.

Adobe reclaims design guru from Microsoft

by Stephen Shankland

A high-powered programmer who'd left Adobe Systems to lead a Microsoft Windows interface design team is heading back after just over a year.

Mark Hamburg had worked on Adobe Photoshop since version 2.0 in 1990 and then was instrumental in designing its photography-specific cousin, Lightroom, which sports a radically different user interface.

Hamburg left Adobe for Microsoft in 2008 to become a "distinguished engineer" leading work on improving operating system usability. He called the job an opportunity that "was a little too interesting to turn down" because he found the Windows' experience "really annoying."

This post caught my eye as I know at least half a dozen photoshop engineers from when I worked with them building on Windows platforms. And, when Mark Hamburg switched to Microsoft I dropped by to see what he thought of joining Microsoft.

Well, I guess he didn’t like it that much as he is back to Adobe in a year.

As data center executives move, I am waiting to hear when they go back.  The industry is much too small with few expertise to not expect this.

Don’t get me started on the series of mishaps in Microsoft to create a Photoshop competitor. A good friend of mine who worked for me at Microsoft and is ex-Adobe as well was Hamburg’s boss’s boss. We worked on RAW image formats in 2001 and tried to convince Microsoft the future of imaging required RAW image support.  People thought we were crazy.  After Lightroom and Aperture have market share, and Photoshop supports RAW, Microsoft marketing realizes the RAW image market is gaining market share.

This same friend went back to Adobe after Microsoft.  But, now he is at Google.

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Learning from Google and Microsoft, First Ask the Question “Are you at war?”

Google and Microsoft are at war in many ways, and part of it is in data centers. We all pay attention to what they are doing, competing in PUE and energy efficiency. But, you need to understand their views as they are at war with each other.  There are those of you love or hate each of these companies, but it doesn’t mean you are at war with them. So, ask yourself are you at war with Google and Microsoft? If not, maybe what they are doing is not appropriate for you.

WSJ has an opinion article about Google and Micorsoft.

Techdom’s Two Cold Wars

  • By HOLMAN W. JENKINS, JR.

Columnist's name

Why didn’t the U.S. and the USSR just ignore each other and save themselves the cost of an arms race? Answer: Each had the potential to do such serious damage to the other, they dared not risk it.

Microsoft and Google also have the power to damage each other, and are better off if they don’t. They too spend a lot of money on deterrence—a puzzle since both are inevitably owned by many of the same shareholders, including large mutual and pension funds. Even more than the Cold War superpowers, they have every incentive quietly to agree to be deterred without investing quite so much on an arms race.

These are thoughts designed to trouble the naïve delight of many who heard Google’s announcement last week that it intends to roll out an operating system to compete with Windows. Partisan Google fans imagine Google finally is preparing to go toe-to-toe with its nemesis. They couldn’t be more wrong.

Google might do so if Microsoft were unilaterally to disarm in some way. That’s not going to happen. Microsoft merely is being reminded that its fat Windows margins are vulnerable to attack.

Microsoft sent the parallel message to Google when it spent millions to launch Bing, a new search engine that’s receiving good reviews even from Microsoft haters. Bing, Microsoft hopes, will finally prove a weapon that can seriously threaten Google’s margins, though only to keep Google from raiding Microsoft’s.

Sticking with the war metaphor, another perspective on ways to manage data centers is comparing Churchill vs. Hitler two people who were at war. Here is a BBC article on their Secrets of Leadership. First the similarities in approach which both Google and Microsoft have.

Fundamental similarities and differences

What both Hitler and Churchill did have in common, however, was a terrific tenacity of purpose. This was forged in their 'wilderness' years - Hitler's in the 1920s, Churchill's in the 1930s - when they were out of office and generally derided by the political classes.

By not altering their message to suit their audience, but by carrying on insisting that they were right, they both garnered huge support when events finally seemed to confirm their view of the political situation. Thus, once economic circumstances changed in Germany in the depression years of the 1930s, and after the British view of appeasement changed when the Nazis invaded Czechoslovakia in 1939, both men were in a position to capitalise on that most satisfying phrase in politics: 'I told you so.'

But, they had different management styles.

Of the two men, Hitler was actually kinder to his immediate staff than Churchill was to his. In terms of man-management, Hitler was - astonishingly enough - the more considerate boss. Churchill's secretaries often became exasperated by his rudeness and lack of indulgence, whereas the Führer was adored by those who worked closest with him. He remembered their names and birthdays, visited them when they were ill, and they repaid him with lifetime devotion, even after his crimes became generally known. Churchill was loved by his staff because he was 'saving civilisation', not because of his off-hand way of treating them (in 1940 things got so bad, his wife had to remonstrate with him about his manner).

Although Hitler might have been a better people-manager in some ways, his tendency to attempt to micro-manage the Third Reich once the war broke out led directly to his downfall. Whereas in the years leading up to the outbreak of war Hitler took a back seat in terms of administration, after 1939 he insisted on taking decisions that ought to have been left to far more junior officers. At one point during the war in the east he wound up ordering small-scale maps and directing Wehrmacht troop movements all the way down to battalion level.

Churchill did the absolute opposite, although as First Lord of the Admiralty he did get too involved in detail - he enquired into the number of duffel-coats issued to individual ships by their commanders, and gave orders that backgammon rather than cards should be played on Royal Navy vessels. But once the war was underway he managed to concentrate on the bigger picture, concerning himself with the broad strategic sweep of the war rather than the minutiae.

In this, Churchill was greatly helped by the fact that he was not a totalitarian dictator. The British chiefs of staff could stand up to Churchill - and under their chairman Field-Marshal Lord Alanbrooke they frequently did - in a way that would have been inconceivable with the Führer. As a result of Churchill's never once overruling the service chiefs, the grand strategy of the war was run in a rational and logical way that was simply impossible in Nazi Germany.

Now you can argue which is better Churchill or Hitler, but consider they were at war.

Are you at war in your data center efforts? 

If not, maybe you need to learn from someone who isn’t fighting a battle, planning a strategy for sustainable data center operations, someone who thinks about green data centers.

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Microsoft rides Bing success, maybe they should rename the company - BingSoft

Microsoft is riding a wave of excitement as bing.com makes progress.

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 24TH, 2009 BY JORDAN MCCOLLUM

0

Bing’s Paid Clicks Still Up

bing-logo-2-jBing’s flash in the pan—supposed to burn out a while ago—is extending every day, at least in one important area: paid clicks. So far this month, we’ve seen that

Efficient Frontier is back again this week with more good news: Bing continues to see increases in their paid clicks:
bingclickshare

According to our data analysis, Bing expanded its share of paid clicks for the two weeks post launch. Bing’s share of paid clicks is up 13% for the second week post launch as compared to pre-launch. And, it represents an incremental 5% lift over the first week.

 

Maybe Microsoft should rename the company to BingSoft.

What do you think?  It could be part of the plan now that Bill Gates has left.  Rebrand the company.The stock has performed as well.

I would like to see the utilization of those Microsoft Search servers now that they have something to do.

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Microsoft Hires Yahoo Data Center Executive, Nine Articles So Far

Who would have thought there would would nine articles regarding Microsoft hiring the replacement for Mike Manos.  Must be a combination of Microsoft hiring another Yahoo executive.

Microsoft plucks Yahoo! data center efficiency expert

Register - ‎8 hours ago‎

Microsoft has hired a Yahoo! data center veteran to help build an energy efficient infrastructure beneath its planned cloud and online services. ...

Microsoft hires Yahoo data center exec Silicon Valley / San Jose ...

Bizjournals.com - ‎8 hours ago‎

Microsoft Corp. on Monday said it poached a top data center executive from rival Yahoo Inc. The Redmond-based software giant (NASDAQ:MSFT), in a blog post, ...

Microsoft nabs Yahoo data center executive

CNET News - Ina Fried - ‎11 hours ago‎

In his new role, Timmons will lead a data center services team, Microsoft infrastructure services general manager Arne Josefsberg said in a blog posting. ...

Microsoft Hires Key Yahoo Data Center Executive

ChannelWeb - Kevin McLaughlin - ‎7 hours ago‎

At Yahoo, Timmons led the buildout of Yahoo's data center strategy and has a reputation for placing great importance on the PUE (Power Usage Effectiveness) ...

Yahoo data center executive jumps to Microsoft

Ars Technica - ‎9 hours ago‎

Redmond has hired a former Yahoo Operations vice president to lead its Data Center Services team. Kevin Timmons today joined the Global Foundation Services ...

Microsoft Steals Away Another Top Yahoo

InternetNews.com - Stuart J. Johnston - ‎7 hours ago‎

In a posting on the MS Datacenters blog, the software giant announced it has hired Kevin Timmons, former Yahoo (NASDAQ: YHOO) vice president of operations, ...

Former Yahoo Exec Joins Microsoft

Web Host Industry Review - Justin Lee - ‎7 hours ago‎

Most recently serving as vice president of operations at Yahoo, Timmons led the build-out of the company's data centers and infrastructure. ...

Microsoft Hires Its Sixth Yahoo Exec (In Just Over Six Months)

paidContent.org - ‎11 hours ago‎

Timmons was the vice president of operations at Yahoo, where he led the build-out of the company's data centers and infrastructure. He had previously served ...

Kevin Timmons: Microsoft hires yet another Yahoo executive

TechWhack - ‎13 hours ago‎

Microsoft has announced the appointment of Kevin Timmons as the new head of their Data Center Services. He takes over from Michael Manos who had left the ...

Google News didn’t have Rich Miller’s Data Center Knowledge.

http://www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/2009/06/22/microsoft-hires-yahoo-data-center-chief/

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NYTimes Data Center Story, Breaking The Rules

I had some friends check out DataCenterKnowledge’s post on a NYTimes feature article, “Data Center Overload” coming out this Sunday in the Magazine.  Rich Miller has a great quote from the article.

Trying to chart the cloud’s geography can be daunting, a task that is further complicated by security concerns. “It’s like ‘Fight Club,’ ” says Rich Miller, whose Web site, Data Center Knowledge, tracks the industry. “The first rule of data centers is: Don’t talk about data centers.”

image

The above is from a slide show.

This article must have been in the works for a while as Mike Manos is in the article as a Microsoft employee and “Manos” show up 9 times in the article.

As I pulled up to it in a Prius with Michael Manos, who was then Microsoft’s general manager of data-center services, he observed that while “most people wouldn’t be able to tell this wasn’t just a giant warehouse,” an experienced eye could discern revelatory details. “You would notice the plethora of cameras,” he said. “You could follow the power lines.” He gestured to a series of fluted silver pipes along one wall. “Those are chimney stacks, which probably tells you there’s generators behind each of those stacks.” The generators, like the huge banks of U.P.S. (uninterruptible power supply) batteries, ward against surges and power failures to ensure that the data center always runs smoothly.

Google is mentioned 12 times.

Microsoft is mentioned 22 times.

Yahoo  - 3

Amazon - 4

Facebook – 13

Microsoft wins with the positiong battle, and has the last 2 paragraphs.

“Our perspective long term is: It’s not a building, it’s a piece of equipment,” says Daniel Costello, Microsoft’s director of data-center research, “and the enclosure is not there to protect human occupancy; it’s there to protect the equipment.”

From here, it is easy to imagine gradually doing away with the building itself, and its cooling requirements, which is, in part, what Microsoft is doing next, with its Gen 4 data center in Dublin. One section of the facility consists of a series of containers, essentially parked and stacked amid other modular equipment — with no roof or walls. It will use outside air for cooling. On our drive to Tukwila, Manos gestured to an electrical substation, a collection of transformers grouped behind a chain-link fence. “We’re at the beginning of the information utility,” he said. “The past is big monolithic buildings. The future looks more like a substation — the data center represents the information substation of tomorrow.”

Articles like this are exposing data centers and making it hard to abide by the rule - “The first rule of data centers is: Don’t talk about data centers.”

This is just the beginning of breaking the rules in data centers.

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