Christian Belady fills Daniel Costello's position at Microsoft

I recently caught up with a data center executive to discuss who was moving where.  I told him Mike Manos was moving.  Reviewed a few people I heard had thrown their hat in for vacant positions.  Where there was likely a change coming.

One that just popped yesterday with a blog post in Christian Belady's move to fill the position Daniel Costello vacated at Microsoft when he went to Google.

The Gravitational Pull Was Too Strong

By Christian Belady
General Manager, Data Center Research, Global Foundation Services

Many of you may have already heard that I have change roles yet again in Microsoft. It was only 11 months ago that I had moved to Microsoft Research to pursue ground-breaking work in the Extreme Computing Work (Apples Don’t Fall Far from the Tree). In that time, I experienced the great opportunity of helping to set an organizational vision and build a team of Hardware Architects and Engineers, who I believe are second to none. It was a significant experience given to me by Dan Reed the CVP of XCG, which I am very grateful for. However, while their team’s ship has set sail on a course that I believe will transform the industry five to 10 years out, I realized that growing up professionally in a product development ecosystem most of my career, I do need more of an instant gratification. Combined with that need and the growing business needs of the Global Foundation Services (GFS) team, I am thrilled to say that I will be going back to my roots in Microsoft to be the GM of Datacenter Research (DCR), reporting to Kevin Timmons.

DCR will be an advanced development lab (versus a traditional research lab), whose horizon is one step beyond the datacenters we have on the drawing board today.  I am blessed to have yet another great opportunity.

2011 will most likely be a dynamic year for data center executives look for greener pastures.

One of the problems I was talking to with an insider is why data center engineers are not as well compensated as Network Engineers.  Huh?  If you didn't know a top network engineer can have a salary of $200-300K.  Name me a data center engineer who gets paid in that range.  Why the problem can exist is for many companies data centers are part of real estate.  Networking engineers are more closely aligned with IT development.  Networking engineers can quickly trace issues and fix networks in minutes, or bring them down in minutes as well as changes are made.

There are exceptions to this disparity, and the top data center talent is being drawn to where there are better opportunities.

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Mike Manos moves from Nokia to AOL

Mike Manos makes another career move, and lands at AOL.

I’ve Got Mail….A new Aol.

January 27, 2011 by mmanos

You may have seen the announcement today about my recent decision and move to join the new leadership team at Aol.  To some of my friends in the Technorati, and most specifically the Valley, this move probably seems very contrarian.  Having built some of the largest cloud infrastructure’s in the world, re-aligning operational processes at massive scale, Aol at first stroke may seem an odd choice.  I have worked in some of the largest multi-national companies in the world, I have successfully (and unsuccessfully) launched start-ups, have been a cost center and carried a P&L.  I think I have a pretty good understanding of the range and complexity of challenges (especially from a technology perspective)  from small business to large.   Across the spectrum of these types and sized companies you get a different feel.   Different cultures.  Different attitudes.    Different Vibes.

Mike has in a short period built an impressive list - Disney Interactive, Microsoft, Digital Realty Trust, Nokia, and AOL.

We'll hopefully hear more from Mike as he settles into AOL.

In the coming days/weeks/months, I hope to share many of the exciting things we will be endeavoring to accomplish and give you a real taste of some of the big changes I will be attempting.   As always, technology and operational processes will be key to the success of the mission the company is on and I have some very definite ideas on how we can leap frog current thinking in this space and ensure that our technology and operational approach is no only a strategic value to the business, but also industry leading in execution.

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Analysis: 4 reasons why Verizon bought Terremark

When Verizon announced its acquisition of Terremark I was meeting with Silent Partner's Kevin Francis.  We chatted about what it meant to the industry, and he quickly fired off some e-mails to a few others to discuss the implications of Verizon purchasing Terremark and how it affects the industry.

Kevin gave me his 4 reasons why he thinks Verizon bought Terremark.  Here is the official Verizon press release if you want to hear the official company line.  And where Terremark's data centers are.

Datacenters_Map

Reason #1.  What is the most valuable asset Terremark has?

  1. Control the largest and most strategic Latin American gateway in the US.       


                just as Google acquired 111 8th Avenue to create a gateway or hub for International carriers and ISPs to meet and interconnect with one another and Google, Verizon gains control of the largest access point for Latin American carriers (and therefore eyeballs) in the United States.  This gives them an immediate and frankly scary amount of control over the ingress / egress of US traffic to Latin American eyeballs and vice versa.  Global Crossing has traditionally been the one to “own” Latin America based upon their fiber assets in region.  Verizon now trumps GX by controlling the main interconnect point and peering fabric of NAP of the Americas.

What is the Terremark Latin American Gateway?

NAP of the Americas

Terremark's flagship facility, the NAP of the Americas®, is one of the most significant telecommunications projects in the world.  The Tier-IV facility was the first purpose-built, carrier-neutral Network Access Point and is the only facility of its kind specifically designed to link Latin America with the rest of the world.

NAP of the Americas - Tier IV South Florida Data Center

Miami has been ranked as one of the top-five best interconnected cities in the world, ahead of San Francisco, Chicago and Washington, D.C. Terremark's NAP of the Americas makes Miami the only city in the U.S. where Optical, Ethernet, MPLS, Voice and Internet traffic is handed off in a single location.

Reason #2.  It's all about the cloud.

    2.  Cloud
                Verizon instantly has a viable cloud product available in the US and Europe which is built on Vmware’s Vcloud Express platform which Verizon also uses.  Both parties are members of the vCloud initiative and thanks to Vmware’s 5% stake in Terremark they effectively get $70 million dollars worth of Vmware’s money too.  Last September VZ put their toe in the water with Terremark and begain white labeling their cloud to circumvent their time to market problems they were experiencing building their own cloud product.  In addition, Terremark is huge in the federal sector thanks to their NAP of the Capital Region and has existing federal customers on their cloud (a feat few can claim).  Interesting to note that last November Terremark was selected to host the FCC’s cloud initiatives.  Is this leverage over the FCC for regulatory negotiations?? hmmm

Reason #3.  We want the people and their customers.  Note this supports why Verizon will let Terremark exist as a subsidiary and keep the Terremark brand.

   3. If you cant’ beat ‘em, buy ‘em
                Witness Cyrus One’s acquisition by Cinncinnati Bell and HyperTec’s acquisition by Bell Canada.  Carriers have realized that they don’t have the right personnel and intellectual capital to build modern, high density carrier neutral facilities. 15 years after deregulation the LECs and Tier1 operators are still saddled with a dated go-to-market strategy whereby they mistakenly believe selling non-carrier neutral sites will guarantee they control customers and gain all of their associated wallet share of network services.  Finally they are conceding to the fact that the 2nd generation of carrier neutral operators are running circles around them in terms of 1) acquiring emerging growth and tech centric customers (content, gaming, financials)  and 2) keeping them via sticky products like peering and Ethernet exchange platforms.   If you  can’t beat em’, BUY ‘em!  Adjunct to this point – I would argue that Terremark’s Design and Engineering team is one of the best in the market today. They deploy true Tier III sites vs Equinix and others (tier II).

Reason #4.  Security and Federal government market.  I was just talking to a friend who works for Department of Homeland Security and he has toured the Terremark Culpepper, VA data center which he says is one of the best secure data centers.

4. Security Expertise
                Terremark - Verizon has a huge managed security service provider division thanks to their acquisition of Cybertrust in 2007.  Terremark brings two key elements to Verizon’s MSSP practice.  1) Vision / Strategy.  Terremark is a leader in this area thanks to their acquisition of Data Return and their industry leading personnel like Christopher Day, Chief Security Architect.   2) Terremark has excellent knowledge and experience around deploying and operating secure systems in a cloud environment. This will prove to be a huge leg up on the competition as folks try to tackle the security problems associated with enterprise cloud.

Another analysis published is here, but they don't go into nearly as much depth as Kevin does and they don't make the point that NAP of America as the #1 asset.

DataCenterKnowledge posts on Verizon plans to keep Terremark as a carrier neutral facility.

Verizon: Terremark Will Remain Carrier-Neutral

January 28th, 2011 : Rich Miller

Can a telecom carrier own a carrier-neutral Internet exchange point? Many in the data center industry may be skeptical of the idea. But executives at Verizon insist that its $1.4 billion acquisition of Terremark will not mean any changes for Terremark’s carrier-neutral colocation business.

Peering sites work best in carrier neutral locations.

Terremark an Independent Subsidiary
“We have very specifically set Terremark up as a wholly-owned subsidiary, and Manny and his team will be independent,” said Lowell McAdam, president and chief operating officer of Verizon. “We’re not going to try to cramp their style at all. There will be no moves to take certain customers out of play.”

“Our business model is not changing,” said Terremark CEO Manuel Medina. “Our carrier-neutral colocation business will continue as is.”

How will this play? The carrier hotel industry was born out of unhappiness with incumbent telcos and challenges in deploying equipment in central offices. After the Telecom Act of 1996 opened the U.S. phone market to competitive carriers, incumbent phone companies were directed to provide their new rivals with access to central offices to house equipment and make connections.

fyi, a reason I listen to Kevin is his company's business is advising clients on their network strategy.

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Next big carrier hotel to be bought is One Wilshire in LA.  Major tenants are.

MAJOR TENANTS:
Core Site
Data center and property management company
Musick, Peeler & Garrett LLP
National law firm
Verizon Communications, Inc.
Broadcast and communications provider

Huh, Verizon is a major tenant.  Do I hear a bidding war for One Wilshire?  Google, Verizon, who else will join in?  Whoever can build a worldwide data center solution first has the advantage.

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Netflix's no data center strategy expanding International

Netflix wrote about its move to AWS and how well things worked.

5 Lessons We’ve Learned Using AWS

In my last post I talked about some of the reasons we chose AWS as our computing platform. We’re about one year into our transition to AWS from our own data centers. We’ve learned a lot so far, and I thought it might be helpful to share with you some of the mistakes we’ve made and some of the lessons we’ve learned.

1. Dorothy, you’re not in Kansas anymore.

If you’re used to designing and deploying applications in your own data centers, you need to be

prepared to unlearn a lot of what you know. Seek to understand and embrace the differences operating in a cloud environment.

...


5. Commit yourself.

When I look back at what the team has accomplished this year in our AWS migration, I’m truly amazed. But it didn’t always feel this good. AWS is only a few years old, and building at a high scale within it is a pioneering enterprise today. There were some dark days as we struggled with the sheer size of the task we’d taken on, and some of the differences between how AWS operates vs. our own data centers.

As you run into the hurdles, have the grit and the conviction to fight through them. Our CEO, Reed Hastings, has not only been fully on board with this migration, he is the person who motivated it! His commitment, the commitment of the technology leaders across the company, helped us push through to success when we could have chosen to retreat instead.

AWS is a tremendous suite of services, getting better all the time, and some big technology companies are running successfully there today. You can too! We hope some of our mistakes and the lessons we’ve learned can help you do it well.

-john ciancutti.

Part of the commitment is international growth.  Here is a post for a Netflix International Engineering Director.

Director of Engineering – International Services

ECommerce and Systems Engineering | Los Gatos, CA


Send Jobvite

The opportunity is compelling: to lead the Internationalization of Netflix Services, a fast growing and highly admired company. Fueled by the broad appeal of being able to instantly watch unlimited movies and TV episodes, Netflix subscriber growth has been accelerating for the last several years and is now more than 50% year-over-year. At the same time Netflix is well positioned to expand internationally in 2011. Our upside potential has never been greater—both domestically and internationally. And never has there been a more promising time to join Netflix.

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China Telcos executive shuffle across competitors, but is really an internal reshuffle

Telcos in China are different that the US and understanding them can be difficult.  Here is some information for you to consider. Also, keep in mind Telcos are going to be key players in any data center build out in China.  The nice thing is they almost all say they want green data centers.

One of the good example of the different is an organizational change in 2004.

While times have changed, the Communist Party of China (CCP) still retains control over key commercial areas. Consider the musical-chairs reappointments of the heads of China's major telecom companies to their competitors in 2004. Investors were stunned, but seen through the eyes of the CCP, this was nothing more than an internal reshuffle.

Another interesting thing about China is the Red Machines for communication.

On the desks of the heads of China's 50-odd biggest state companies, amid the clutter of computers, family photos and other fixtures of the modern CEO's office life, sits a red phone. The executives and their staff who jump to attention when it rings know it as "the red machine," perhaps because to call it a mere phone does not do it justice. "When the 'red machine' rings," a senior executive of a state bank told me, "you had better make sure you answer it."

The red machine is like no ordinary phone. Each one has just a four-digit number. It connects only to similar phones with four-digit numbers within the same encrypted system. They are much coveted nonetheless. For the chairmen and women of the top state companies, who have every modern communications device at their fingertips, the red machine is a sign they have arrived, not just at the top of the company, but in the senior ranks of the Party and the government. The phones are the ultimate status symbol, as they are only given out—under the orders of the Party and government—to people in jobs with the rank of vice minister and above.

The phones are encrypted not just to secure party and government communications from foreign intelligence agencies. They also provide protection against snooping by anyone in China outside the party's governing system. Possession of the red machine means you have qualified for membership of the tight-knit club that runs the country, a small group of about 300 people, mainly men, with responsibility for about one-fifth of humanity.

Here is a wikipedia entry on the China Telecommunications industry.

Telecommunications industry in China

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article discusses the telecommunications industry in mainland China. For Hong Kong and Macau, see Communications in Hong Kong and Communications in Macau.

The telecommunications industry in China is dominated by three state-run businesses: China Telecom, China Unicom and China Mobile. The three companies were formed by a recent revolution and restructuring launched in May 2008, directed by Ministry of Information Industry (MII), Nationals Development and Reform Commissions (NDRC) and Minister of Finance. Since then, all the three companies gained 3G licenses and engaged fixed-line and mobile business in China.

As a result of China’s entry to the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 2001, a new regulatory regime is now being established and foreign operators are gradually being allowed to access the market. Although Chinese customers keep complaining that they need to pay higher prices for products and services and receive lower-quality services than customers in America orEurope, foreign travellers often feel that telecommunication services in China are cheap and convenient.[citation needed]

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