Thinking air-side economizer use, consider Seattle has had only 351 minutes of over 80 degrees this summer

I know this will not make you locate your data center in Seattle, but this is a fun piece of weather trivia.  As of July 24 there have been only 351 minutes of over 80 degree weather this summer.

Seattle soaks up some summer -- 273 minutes of it to be exact

By Scott Sistek

Story Created: Jul 24, 2011 at 9:39 PM PDT

For a while, it seemed Seattle was about to cement its legacy as home of the 78-minute summer.

But no more.

With a nice warm, sunny Sunday, Seattle now has had its first extended "summer experience" which I had defined as 80 degrees or warmer at the University of Washington.

The total tally was 273 minutes Sunday (4 hours, 33 minutes) bringing our entire Seattle summer experience up to a whopping 351 minutes.

I have joked that if Global Warming happens we are going to see a migration to the Pacific Northwest.

And Texas is on the end of the spectrum.

Meanwhile, in Waco, the streak continues for now. Thursday's high of 103 degrees marks the 29th straight triple-digit day and the 46th such day of 2011.

Nebula launches Hardware Appliance to run the cloud, but will users want the HW or SW?

The cloud is about virtualized environments.  So, it is bit ironic that Nebula's first product is a physical hardware appliance when the solution could be downloaded bits.

Nebula Cloud Appliance

What they’re all working is fairly fascinating: A hardware appliance pre-loaded with customized OpenStack software and Arista networking tools, designed to manage racks of commodity servers as a private cloud.

...

Kemp wasn’t planning to do an appliance, he admits, but initial investor Bechtolsheim convinced him it was the right approach. It lets Nebula provide a turnkey product for deploying OpenStack, Kemp explained, by optimizing and locking down some of the variables that might make deploying a private cloud more difficult.

Nebula's team didn't like the Eucalyptus product and choose OpenStack.

However, even with all the specialization, Nebula is very committed to building the core OpenStack code base. “OpenStack exists because Eucalyptus didn’t work at NASA,” Kemp acknowledged, so he understands the importance of solid, customizable, open-source code.

Ultimately, he said, a better OpenStack means a better Nebula, because Nebula can focus on filling in the gaps and not on reinventing the wheel. Much like Bechtolsheim was successful at Sun Microsystems  by building atop Unix and at Arista by using standard hardware components.

Here is a question.  If Nebula is the cloud appliance.

Elastic Infrastructure

The Nebula appliance dynamically provisions and destroys virtual infrastructure and storage as workloads fluctuate.

Why wouldn't you run the Nebula SW on multiple Open Compute Servers in your cloud environment?  Seems like the Nebula appliances are single point of failures unless you have multiple instances running in your cloud environment.  Which should be easy if you buy a few more Open Compute Servers.

Nebula was announced at OSCON,  but who would let their cloud environment be down waiting for a Fedex and ship their cloud data outside the company in their Nebula Appliance?

Nebula will supply the appliance. "If it fails, FedEx it back to us, and we'll send you another one," Kemp said. "Our little box has a 10 gigabit ethernet switch built into it. You can plug cheap commodity servers into the rack. You don't have to turn them on. It will do that. The interface is like Amazon Services." These servers act as monitors by this appliance, including log files and flow data. "What we do is create interface points to all of the common CMDB tools, managing tools, security tools, like ArcSight or Splunk," said Kemp. "We will create integration points for those particular products."

I am sure there is a high availability architecture that Nebula has, but why buy multiple Nebula Appliances when the same hardware, the Open Compute Servers are in your environment?  Because, the investor convinced the Nebula Founders it was a better revenue model?

Kemp wasn’t planning to do an appliance, he admits, but initial investor Bechtolsheim convinced him it was the right approach.

Would you want an appliance or the software you can run on the Open Compute Server?

BTW, given the SW runs on the Open Compute Server the Nebula Software should run on any hardware, unless Nebula modified the software to be hardware specific.

 

MapR, 1/2 the HW and faster performance for Apache Hadoop

MapR technologies came out of stealth mode in June, and their solution is available for download.

image

MapR is the Next Generation for Apache Hadoop

Here is a presentation that you can watch to learn more.

The Design, Scale and Performance of MapR’s Distribution for Apache Hadoop

Posted on JULY 27, 2011 by JACK

Check out M.C. Srivas’ Hadoop Summit presentation. Srivas, the CTO and co-founder of MapR, outlines the architectural details behind MapR’s performance advantages. This technical discussion also describes the scale advantages of the MapR distributed NameNode and provides comparisons to HDFS.

← Big Data and Hadoop

Pretty cool you can save 1/2 power for your Apache Hadoop system.  Software can save a lot of power to support a green data center.

It is funny to think about the reality of a lights out data center, Dilbert Cartoon as an example

Dilbert has a cartoon on lights out data centers.

Dilbert.com

Human error in the data center is a reality, and the funny part is an answer just like above is to not allow employees in the data center.  Especially if the data center is self-aware.

What is potentially worse than employees are the vendor support employees who are not tracked.  Do you exactly what the warranty service technician did in his service call in your data center?

How important is AWS to Jeff Bezos if it listed last in the highlights of a quarterly financial results?

Amazon.com posted its quarterly press release.

Amazon.com Announces Second Quarter Sales up 51% to $9.91 Billion

SEATTLE, Jul 26, 2011 (BUSINESS WIRE) —

Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN) today announced financial results for its second quarter ended June 30, 2011.

Operating cash flow increased 25% to $3.21 billion for the trailing twelve months, compared with $2.56billion for the trailing twelve months ended June 30, 2010. Free cash flow decreased 8% to $1.83 billion for the trailing twelve months, compared with $1.99 billion for the trailing twelve months ended June 30, 2010.

The market reacted positively.

Amazon.com Tops Profit, Sales Estimates

Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN), the world’s largest online retailer, reported profit and sales that beat analysts’ estimates after its Kindle e-reader and digital-media services helped fuel growth. The shares jumped in late trading.

One interesting fact is AWS is last in the Highlights of quarter.  But, there are three bullet items.

  • Amazon Web Services (AWS) and SAP announced that AWS has been certified as a global technology partner of SAP. Customers can now deploy a variety of SAP solutions in full production environments including SAP(R) Rapid Deployment and SAP(R) BusinessObjects(TM).
  • AWS announced the availability of Amazon Relational Database Service (RDS) for Oracle databases, allowing customers to easily set up, operate and scale fully managed Oracle databases in the cloud.
  • AWS lowered prices for the fifteenth time in four years by eliminating inbound Internet data transfer costs and reducing outbound data transfer costs.

What was #1 with 4 bullet items?  The Kindle.

  • Sales growth of Kindle devices accelerated in second quarter 2011 compared to first quarter 2011.
  • Since AT&T agreed to sponsor screensavers, Kindle 3G with Special Offers is now our bestselling Kindle device - at only $139. With Kindle 3G, there’s no wireless set up and no paying or hunting for Wi-Fi hotspots. Kindle 3G’s always-on global wireless connectivity means that wherever you are, you can download books and periodicals in less than 60 seconds and start reading instantly. Amazon pays for Kindle’s 3G wireless connectivity, which means the convenience of 3G comes with no monthly fees, data plans or annual contracts.
  • Amazon.com announced the launch of Kindle Textbook Rental, offering students savings of up to 80% off textbook list prices. Tens of thousands of textbooks are available for the 2011 school year. In addition, Kindle Textbook Rental offers the ability to customize rental periods to any length between 30 and 360 days, so students only pay for the specific amount of time they need a book.
  • The U.S. Kindle Store now has more than 950,000 books, including New Releases and 110 of 111 New York Times Bestsellers. Over 800,000 of these books are $9.99 or less, including 65 New York Times Bestsellers. Millions of free, out-of-copyright, pre-1923 books are also available to read on Kindle.
  • So how important is AWS to Jeff Bezos?  You know his top priority is The Kindle.