Data Center Technical Targeting Analyst

Data Centers are complex systems, but there are many more complex systems that have had a bunch of smart people thinking about how to solve tough problems.

I've been going down the path of what others do and found this job post for a CIA Technical/Targeting Analyst.

Technical/Targeting Analyst

Work Schedule:
Full Time

Salary:
$42,209 – $136,771

Location:
Washington, DC metropolitan area

Do you have an aptitude for solving challenging puzzles? Are you able to focus on technical details while maintaining a “big picture” perspective? Do you enjoy writing and briefing on the important results of your work? The Central Intelligence Agency's Directorate of Science and Technology is seeking candidates to serve as Technical Analysts and be part of a dynamic team that unites three disciplines—analysis, development and operations—to maximize our collection advantage.

As a Technical Analyst you will be a pivotal member of a mission that pioneers solutions that enable the DST to collect intelligence against our nation's highest priority threats in a global environment that is often hostile, fast-paced, and technologically savvy. We are looking for high-energy, intellectually curious individuals who thrive on tackling the most difficult all-source analytic efforts in support of cutting-edge operations using specialized, state-of-the-art tools and technologies. This work is increasingly complex and highly dynamic, affording the successful candidate considerable opportunity to address high-profile intelligence issues and apply the full-range of analytic tradecraft to sophisticated, challenging DST mission covering many regional areas including: the Middle East, East Asia, South Asia, Europe and Latin America as well as developing substantive expertise on terrorism, proliferation, cyber threats, narcotics trafficking and money laundering.

Couldn't you take the first paragraph and apply it to data centers?

Do you have an aptitude for solving challenging puzzles? Are you able to focus on technical details while maintaining a “big picture” perspective? Do you enjoy writing and briefing on the important results of your work? The Central Intelligence Agency's Directorate of Science and Technology Data Center Agency (DCA) is seeking candidates to serve as Technical Analysts and be part of a dynamic team that unites three disciplines—analysis, development and operations—to maximize our collection  Data Center advantage.

Hiring a CIA spook could be an interesting way to gain insight.

Data Centers are ready for change and the analyst role could be a key tool to figure out a better way.

Read more

Sea Micro defines a little green server

I've been blogging about the idea of a Little Green Server watching for companies who embrace the idea that smaller is better.  I checked my blog and I wrote about the idea Intel Atom Servers in July 2008.

Sea Micro came out of its quiet period, and made quite a bit of noise. 

image

The one I am waiting for next is ARM Servers.

From the momentum it looks like the idea of Intel Atom servers is going to be deployed.

SeaMicro in the News

June 14, 2010

Wall Street Journal: SeaMicro Tries to Rethink the Internet Server

Not many people start computer companies these days, with fierce competition and dog-eat-dog pricing making other businesses seem much more appealing. But SeaMicro is going for it, in an unusual way.

Read more

June 14, 2010

EE Times: Startup SeaMicro packs 512 Intel Atoms in server. SM10000 seen as first in wave of Atom, ARM-based servers

SAN JOSE, Calif. — Startup SeaMicro announced Monday (June 14) a server that packs 512 Intel Atom processors in a 10U chassis to deliver the same performance at a fraction of their power and space as systems using conventional server CPUs.

Read more

June 13, 2010

Venture Beat: SeaMicro drops an atom bomb on the server industry

Coming out of stealth, SeaMicro is dispelling the Silicon Valley myth that you can’t innovate in hardware anymore. The startup is announcing today it has created a server with 512 Intel Atom chips that gets supercomputer performance but uses 75 percent less power and space than current servers.

Read more

June 13, 2010

GIGAOM: SeaMicro’s Low-power Server Finally Launches

SeaMicro, the Santa Clara, Calif.-based startup building a low-power server using Atom chips and its own specially designed silicon to manage the networking, has finally unveiled its hardware, and it’s pretty darn impressive.

Read more

June 13, 2010

IDG/PC World: SeaMicro's Cloud Server Sports 512 Atom Processors

SeaMicro has developed a server that packs in 512 low-power Intel Atom processors on miniature motherboards the size of credit cards, the company announced Monday.

Read more

June 13, 2010

Fast Company: Google's Power-Hogging Server Farms Versus SeaMicro's Super-Efficient Supercomputers

The computer server industry may not sound like a hotbed for innovation to you, but SeaMicro thinks differently. It's just rocked the server world with a super-computer-like product that's smaller and more power-efficient than any rival's.

Read more

June 14, 2010

DailyTech: SeaMicro Launches Microtransaction Server Featuring 512 Atom CPUs

Taking multi-core to an extreme

Read more

June 14, 2010

earth2tech: SeaMicro Unveils Low Power Server

Get ready to start hearing a whole lot more about stealthy low-power server maker SeaMicro.

Read more

June 14, 2010

Data Center Knowledge: SeaMicro Unveils its Low Power Server

Startup server maker SeaMicro today unveiled a new low-power server that promises to slash power costs for companies running large Internet services and cloud computing platforms.

Read more

June 14, 2010

eWeek: SeaMicro Uses Intel Atom Chip in Server Architecture

Startup SeaMicro is unveiling its SM10000 server, which takes advantage of the small and highly energy efficient Intel Atom processors and its own I/O virtualization technology to create a computing architecture that is highly scalable and drives down server power and space costs by as much as 75 percent over traditional systems.

Read more

June 14, 2010

CRN UK: SeaMicro shakes up server arena

Start-up vendor SeaMicro has slammed what it sees as a lack of innovation in the server market as it launches into the UK channel.

Read more

June 14, 2010

Information Week: SeaMicro Intros Server With 512 Atom Processors

Silicon Valley startup SeaMicro has unveiled a 10U rack-mount server that uses 512 low-power, Intel Atom processors to dramatically cut energy consumption and space in the data center.

Read more

June 14, 2010

Wired: Startup Builds Power-Efficient Servers With Netbook Chips

Atom chips are the underpowered CPUs inside most netbooks. But one company has found a way to stitch 512 of them together to create a single powerful server.

Read more

June 14, 2010

CNET: Start-up launches DOE-backed green server

Start-up SeaMicro has launched a green server based on Intel's power-sipping Atom processor. The company is backed by about $25 million in venture capital and a grant from the U.S. Department of Energy.

Read more

June 14, 2010

AnandTech: SeaMicro Announces SM10000 Server with 512 Atom CPUs and Low Power Consumption

Two years ago when I first covered Intel’s Atom architecture I proposed that Moore’s Law has paved the way for two things: 1) ridiculously fast microprocessors, and 2) fast enough microprocessors.

Read more

June 14, 2010

Server Watch: SeaMicro Launches an Atom-Powered Cloud Computing Server

With 512 Atom processors in a 10u rack mounted unit, SeaMicro is defying not just conventional wisdom of what makes a Web server, but server design as well.

Read more

January 06, 2010

Data Center Knowledge: SeaMicro, More Than Just Low-Power Servers

Stealthy startup SeaMicro isn’t saying much about its technology, which aims to “revolutionize the data center landscape” by slashing the power used in IT operations.

Read more

January 06, 2010

GigaOM: SeaMicro’s Secret Server Changes Computing Economics

SeaMicro, a stealthy server company based in Santa Clara, Calif., today scored $9.3 million from the Department of Energy as part of a program to encourage data center efficiency.

Read more

January 06, 2010

earth2tech: SeaMicro, A Server Maker That Could Change the Game of Computing Power

When the Department of Energy announced that it was awarding 14 data center efficiency projects $47 million this morning, one name piqued my interest: SeaMicro.

Read more

Read more

Data Centers As Cathedrals, building big

In three more days, I am going to Italy and taking a two week break from blogging.  Spending a bunch of time in airports, trains, I was looking for a book to dig into.  One book I found that would help get me thinking in another perspective is The Pillars of Earth.

Ken Follett wrote about something that is not considered exciting.

Even before his breakthrough novel, Ken was toying with the idea of an adventure tale surrounding one of his personal obsessions—cathedrals. "I gave it up because, instinctively, I felt like I couldn't do it. It was too ambitious," Ken says.


Still, Ken couldn't shake the idea. "It just kept building up, and when I told writer friends about it they said, 'What a great idea,'" Ken says. "Publishers weren't so keen. They said, 'Ken, you've had a lot of success with Nazis and secret agents and spies. And now this is a book…it's set in the Middle Ages, right Ken? And it's about building a church. Are you sure?'"

And Ken tried to change the way people think about cathedrals.

Oprah says this book will stay with anyone who reads it. "Nobody who reads it ever looks at a church or a cathedral the same," she says. "It made me think about my own life differently. … What a treasure you have given all of us."

Data Centers were bore and dull for the religion of IT.  Built based on the financial sponsors from corporate.

But, now data centers are Pillars of Information for the Earth and major corporations - Google and Facebook could not exist without data centers.

Cathedrals went through major transformations as building technology changed.  Data Centers are ready for major transformation as well.

Read more

2 months after BP spill sensor network deployed, shows you how important monitoring systems are for decision makers who don't know they don't have the data

MSNBC/AP has an article on a sensor network being deployed.

Sensors deployed to better track Gulf spill

Coast Guard says readings will validate estimates of oil gushing from well

Image: Oil recovery efforts in the Gulf

The Transocean Discoverer Enterprise drill ship (with flare) collects oil from over the site of the BP oil well alongside support ships and relief wells as workers try to stem the flow of the spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

By HARRY R. WEBER, RAY HENRY

SCHRIEVER, Louisiana - Undersea sensors were being deployed to a ruptured well in the Gulf ofMexico on Sunday in an effort to better track the amount of oil gushing into the sea, the Coast Guard said, as pressure mounted on BP fromthe Obama administration and Gulf states to create special accounts that would set aside billions of dollars to pay for spill-related claims.

So, where did the estimates come from on the amount of oil spilled?  Back of napkins?

Scientists have struggled to pin down just how much oil is spilling into the Gulf, and the government has stressed that the larger estimates were still preliminary and considered a worse-case scenario. The lead scientist in the effort said last week that the most credible range at the moment is between 840,000 gallons and 1.68 million gallons daily.

The Obama administration's point man on the oil spill, Adm. Thad Allen, said the sensors were going to be deployed Sunday and will start taking pressure readings to validate the estimates, which have been made by using such things as spillcam video and sonar readings.

So, there is no scientific data to support any claims on how much oil has spilled.

Wow.  Shows you were people what people were thinking for the past 2 months.  Somewhere buried was some scientists saying let's deploy a sensor network to measure the spill. 

Read more

Connecting Manure, Water, and EPA - Amish face regulation

HP made news with its Manure powered data center.

NYTimes has an article on how the EPA is looking at the manure from Amish farmers and water pollution.

But farmers like Mr. Stoltzfus are facing growing scrutiny for agricultural practices that the federal government sees as environmentally destructive. Their cows generate heaps of manure that easily washes into streams and flows onward into the Chesapeake Bay.

And the Environmental Protection Agency, charged by President Obama with restoring the bay to health, is determined to crack down. The farmers have a choice: change the way they farm or face stiff penalties.

“There’s much, much work that needs to be done, and I don’t think the full community understands,” said David McGuigan, the E.P.A. official leading an effort by the agency to change farming practices here in Lancaster County.

There is an extremely low chance that HP could talk to the Amish to solve their manure problems with a data center.

Water supply is what has the EPA looking at the Amish.

Last September, Mr. McGuigan and his colleagues visited 24 farms in a pocket of Lancaster County known as Watson’s Run to assess their practices. Twenty-three of the farms were plain sect; 17 were found to be managing their manure inadequately. The abundance of manure was also affecting water quality. Six of the 19 wells sampled contained E. coli bacteria, and 16 had nitrate levels exceeding those allowed by the E.P.A.

Water is one of the most under appreciated earth resources, and thankfully the momentum continues to build to protect it.

If you don't think about how water use and how water waste affects your data center, get ready for a potential visit from a regulatory agency.

Are you acting like an Amish farmer who is stuck in the past?

Read more