US companies building Data Centers in other markets

US based companies build some of the biggest data center portfolios in the world.  The rate of expansion in markets outside the US will grow faster than the US data center market.  Digital Realty Trust announced their Asia expansion.

Jim Smith, chief technology officer (CTO) of the U.S.-based Digital Realty Trust, said the company had been thinking of entering the region earlier in 2008, but the recession in the latter half of that year proved to be a "distraction". Since then, many of its existing customers have been after the datacenter operator to branch out into this part of the world, he noted.

The CTO, who was in town for a conference, told ZDNet Asia during an interview Thursday that as Asia-Pacific has not experienced the "datacenter boom-and-bust" cycle that afflicted the U.S. during the dotcom years at the turn of the century, there are no legacy IT systems to contend with.

Furthermore, there is pent-up demand for more datacenter space and capabilities as companies in this region got out of the 2009 recession pretty quickly and are growing fast, he said. Increasing interest in cloud computing and virtualization technologies by businesses here are the other demand drivers mentioned by the executive.

To address the demand, Smith named four countries, namely Singapore, Australia, Hong Kong and India, which the company will be looking to work out of. Elaborating, he noted that Digital Realty Trust focuses on financial centers globally and has a presence in cities such as London and Paris. The Asian markets that the company is targeting are a natural extension of its business strategy, he said.

HP announced their 6 Global Service Hubs.  IBM has their international strategy.

Yahoo announced its Switzerland data center.  Many have gone to Dublin.

It will be interesting to see what plays out in Asia.  One huge advantage HP and IBM have vs. a Digital Realty Trust is their hiring of thousands employees in the country.

Just like any smart data center site selection process looks at the tax incentives.  The tax incentives for international are important.  HP has the tax incentives for its Malaysia global cent. 

CIO.com: Although these six hubs are not all new to HP, you will be staffing up in these locations. How many and what types of professionals are you hiring in each country?

Rasmussen: We did have a presence in these hubs already, but not at the scale we currently have or with the government approvals and tax benefits. We are aggressively hiring and building them out today. We don't disclose [employment] numbers at the location level or the "best shore" level.

Those who only want data center space like Digital Realty Trust are at a disadvantage to companies like HP, Google, and IBM that can negotiate with their local employee numbers which creates the support for the data center build out.

A more sustainable/green data center strategy requires understanding the environment., not just the environmental issues in an Asia country which includes the social, economic, and political issues.

Growth outside the US is huge.  Many of my best friends are people I worked with on developing products for Asia markets and purchasing products/services from these markets as well. 

Many people fall in love with a culture and want to immerse themselves in it and try to be a local, adopting local customs and business methods.  One good friend in
Japan said you are good at knowing the Japanese, but your advantage is you don't care about doing things the Japanese way, you just want to do the right thing.  They can't control you by telling you, "Sorry Ohara-san we just don't do things that way here."  which gets most Westerners to back off.

One of the funniest things to watch was big 6ft 5in Americans talk Japanese like a woman as he takes Japanese lessons at work from a woman who doesn't do business in Japan.  if you never knew there are gender differences in speaking Japanese.

Gender differences in spoken Japanese

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Japanese language is unusual among major languages in the high degree to which the speech of women collectively differs from that of men. Differences in the ways that girls and boys use language have been detected in children as young as three years old (Tannen).

Such differences are sometimes called "gendered language." In Japanese, speech patterns peculiar to women are sometimes referred to as onna kotoba (女言葉, "women's words") orjoseigo (女性語, "women's language"). The use of "gender" here refers to gender roles, not grammatical gender. A man using feminine speech might be considered effeminate, but his utterances would not be considered grammatically incorrect. In general, the words and speech patterns considered masculine are also seen as rough, vulgar, or abrupt, while the feminine words and patterns make a sentence more polite, more deferential, or "softer" (countering abruptness). Some linguists consider the rough/soft continuum more accurate than the male/female continuum – for example, Eleanor Harz Jorden in Japanese: The Spoken Language refers to the styles as blunt/gentle, rather than male/female.[1]

There are no gender differences in written Japanese (except in quoted speech), and almost no differences in polite speech (teineigo), except for occasional use of wa (and except for the fact that women may be more likely to use polite speech in the first place).

I get around this whole issue when I was in Japan by never speaking Japanese.  I learned on my first trip to Japan in 1987, speaking Japanese doesn't work for me as the people expect my Japanese to be perfect because I look so Japanese.

I should think of these old Asia trip stories more, they are funny. Smile

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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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