HP's 6 Global Delivery Hubs with Data Centers

HP Enterprise Services announced its 6 Global delivery hubs.

HP Expands Best Shore Global Sourcing Model; Names Six Global Delivery Hubs

PALO ALTO, Calif., Nov. 10, 2010


HP Enterprise Services today announced the expansion of Best Shore – its global services delivery model – by designating six countries as global delivery hubs that will grow to support increasing client demand for cost-efficient, scalable services that effectively meet business needs.

This expansion is part of the $1 billion investment HP announced in June to transform and grow its Enterprise Services business.

Bulgaria, China, Costa Rica, India, Malaysia and the Philippines are the designated delivery hubs. These mature HP Best Shore locations operate in time zone-relevant countries and will offer a significant employee base that can deliver various highly scalable services to clients across the globe. These centers also will offer multiple capabilities in each location, including applications, infrastructure technology and business process outsourcing services.

In this announcement there is no mention of data centers. But, how can you put 6 Global enterprise services organizations as a hub without a data center. Digging a bit I found the announcement about the Malaysia facility. and found the data center part.

Built on sustainable design principles, this 60-acre campus represents another investment the company is making to drive strategic growth in Asia. Serving global HP Enterprise Services clients, the center is home to one of six HP Best Shore global delivery hubs and, as part of future investment plans, will house a client-centric HP Next Generation Data Center. Driving HP innovation and addressing internal business needs, this global center also boasts an internal HP Global Application Development and Support Center and a HP Global Finance Center.

if you check out this video about the Malaysia facility you can see it needs the 24x7 service requirements of a data center as part of the service is NOC and customer support services.

I've taken many trips to Southeast Asia back when I was developing Southeast Asia fonts for Win3.1.  Malaysia has the space to support data centers and customer support facilities.  Singapore is often discussed as a location for data centers due to its network access, but building big data centers in Singapore is tough.

Here is an HP video of the Russelheim data center.

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Data Center Roundtable Summit, St Louis Nov 11, 2010 - Information Infrastructure of the 21st Century

Today I am in St Louis participating in a Data Center Roundtable Summit.  There are two panel discussions.

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• Moderator - Jim Grice, Spencer Fane
• Stephen Worn, CTO, DatacenterDynamics
• Mike Kearney, Manager of Economic Development , Ameren
• Don Imholz, EVP, CIO, Centene
• Johnnie Foster, Director, Washington University in St Louis –
CAIT
• James Thompson, Ph.D., Dean, College of Engineering -
University of Missouri
• Steve Wyatt, Ph.D., Vice Provost for Economic Development -
University of Missouri

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The Convergence of Information Technology and
Renewable Energy
• Moderator - Nancy Heimann, Enginuity
• Robert Clayton, Chairman, Missouri Public Service Commission
• Robert Reed, PhD, Research Associate Professor, College of
Engineering and Center for Sustainable Energy
• Dave Ohara, Green M3
• Errol Sandler, PhD., Associate Dean, Washington University

I'll blog observations of this event, not live blogging as I am sitting on a panel and I am starting to learn that there are too many people to meet and as fast as I can blog.  I can't blog in 30 seconds.

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One way to Green a Data Center, go Tiny

One way to think about the old way of data center construction is like a McMansion.

The term is generally used to denote a multi-story house of no clear architectural style,[7] with a larger footprint than existing homes

Bigger was better.

You could look at Containers as the mobile home brought to data centers.  Google started the movement with its Container data centers.

There are now Container data centers from most Server OEMs, data center engineering and construction companies.

Why does a Container approach make sense?  Consider this cnet news article on Tiny Green Homes.

Building a green empire, one Tiny House at a time

by Daniel Terdiman

This is a Tumbleweed Tiny House, part of a collection of more than 20 designs of houses that are small, energy- and materials-efficient, and which emphasize a smart use of space.

(Credit: Daniel Terdiman/CNET)

GRATON, Calif.--As most people know, a major reason for the current housing meltdown was millions of people buying homes far bigger than they needed, let alone could afford. To Jay Shafer, the answer is tiny.

One way to be Green is to be in a smaller space.  A container is a much smaller white space for data centers, and can be a bit claustrophobic.

The question is, who exactly would want to live in a house where you can nearly reach your arms from one side to the other?

For Shafer, it's pretty clear: it's people who are interested in a simple, green lifestyle. These days, the term "green" is thrown about left and right and often means little, but in the case of Tiny Houses, green living is a direct reflection of a choice to live very efficiently, with the minimum amount of unused space, materials, and energy. "I think that's the greenest green thing you can do," Shafer says, "buy less."

Being in a tiny home requires a different philosophy.

A big part of what Shafer sells is his philosophy--that too much space is a waste, and that, for some people, at least, it's not only possible but actually preferable, to live in a home that emphasizes efficiency and thoughtfulness.

Running servers in containers requires a different philosophy as well.  How many people are resistant to containers in data centers because they are used to their McMansions?

How much space do you need?

Personally, my family of 4 and a dog have been living in 850 sq ft for over a year while we rebuild our house. Learning to live in smaller space requires a reprioritization of many things.

Can your servers live in a Tiny Green Data Center?

Keep in mind not all of your IT needs to live in tiny data center space.  it is a place that your low cost energy efficient highest volume servers though would not complain as they are surrounded amongst all their peers, and they consume a fraction of the other equipment who needs to live in McMansion.

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How about Apple obsoleted the Xserve because the future is in the cloud?

I've been reading the news regarding Apple's obsoleting the Xserver.  There is even speculation the replacement is ARM/A4 serversSmile

In the server and mobile space, performance-per-watt is very important. This could obviously be linked with the discontinuation of the XServe. Apple sees this as important to marketing:
http://www.apple.com/xserve/performance.html
Measuring in ssj_ops/watt (super-steve-jobs operations per watt). If they can get their PA Semi engineers to design a server chip with enough cores that it can handle similar loads to a Xeon while consuming a fraction of the power and generating far less heat, that's a huge selling point. I doubt they'd be able to cool them passively but say they build a 16-32 1GHz core chip that consumes 250mW per core is < 10 W. Single thread performance would probably suck so they'd have to aim for 2GHz+ but multi-threaded performance would be fine.

News.com has a recent post on the frustration of  Mac IT admins.

IT admins mourn Xserve's death

by Erica Ogg

RIP Xserve.

RIP Xserve.

(Credit: Apple)

Not many MacBook or iPhone users are going to weep over the cancellation of an Apple server.

In fact, they probably didn't know Apple even made them. But when Apple announced it was shutting down production of the Xserve effective January 31, a very specific group of people took notice.

The Apple faithful inside corporate IT departments large and small are feeling jilted by Apple's sudden cold feet in the enterprise computing market. And though the announcement came last last week, the full impact of Apple's decision is still being absorbed.

Read more: http://news.cnet.com/8301-31021_3-20022249-260.html#ixzz14pw40YQf

How about this for a simple answer?  Jan 31, 2011 is the last day the Xserver is sold.  January is a typical month for Apple to make announcements.  Apple's Maiden DC will be operational.

Don't you think Apple could sell Cloud Computing at a scale that would blow the Mac User base away?  Could you imagine having a hundred, a thousand, or maybe even ten thousand Xserve HW running Apple compute jobs for one user? 

Take AWS business model and execute it for the Apple market.  Include the iPod and iPhone users to send compute jobs to the Apple Cloud.

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