After 5 years of IBM's Smarter Planet Initiative launches MessageSight to connect sensors and things

I remember when IBM announced its smarter planet initiative 5 years and I had lots of questions on how sensor networks will work.  Today IBM announced the MessageSight appliance built on MQTT.

LAS VEGAS - 29 Apr 2013: IBM’s (NYSE: IBM) Smarter Planet strategy took a major technological step forward today with the introduction of IBM MessageSight, a new appliance designed to help organizations manage and communicate with the billions of mobile devices and sensors found in systems such as automobiles, traffic management systems, smart buildings and household appliances.

Over the next 15 years, the number of machines and sensors connected to the Internet will explode. According to IMS Research, there will be more than 22 billion web-connected devices by 2020[i].These new devices will generate more than 2.5 quintillion bytes of new data every day[ii], while every hour enough information is consumed by Internet traffic to fill seven million DVDs.[iii] 

GigaOm’s Stacey Higginbotham has a post that goes into more details.

IBM uses the example of the hundreds of sensors in your car recognizing a problem, turning on your check engine light, and then notifying the dealer so it can do remote diagnostics. As someone who is heading to the dealer tomorrow for a check engine light, this example caught my eye. Yet, I’m not sold on the need for a special box over more intelligence at the sensor, or perhaps a mesh network with nominal “intelligence.”

The internet of things exaflood is coming!

floodThe idea is compelling, but it also grossly simplifies the flow of data inside the internet of things. For example, it assumes all sensor data must be processed in “real time.” It also assumes all the data must be processed. Both of these are untrue, especially in the early days of the internet of things. But IBM is looking ahead. From its release on the MessageSight appliance:

I am at the conference and I’ll see if there is anything else interesting on MessageSight.

Disclosure: I work with GigaOm Pro as a freenlance analyst

Off to a bit of Kids Activities and the LV

I’ll be blogging a bit slow as I have a bit of kids activities through Sunday.  On Monday I head to LV to attend IBM’s Impact conference and hang out with some of my data center friends who ar ein town.

Also, I am so damn busy I don’t have time I used to write.  I need to get back in the groove.

Does Google's call for NC Renewable Energy paint a target on Duke Energy for Greenpeace?

I was in NC last week, and missed the Google event in Lenoir, NC.  When I am doing technical data center work I take almost no pictures and don’t write any blog entries which is why I was so quiet last week and it was understandable I missed the Google event.

GigaOm’s Katie Fehrenbacher did cover the Google announcement and put things in perspective of her visit to NC.

Google calls on utilities to sell it clean energy for data centers, starting in North Carolina

 

APR. 19, 2013 - 8:30 AM PDT
Google Lenoir
SUMMARY:

Google is asking utilities to create programs that will sell companies clean power if they’re willing to pay for it, starting with Duke Energy in North Carolina.

It seems with Google’s announcements and Facebook’s announcements, they are both deflecting Greenpeace to go after others.  Will Greenpeace start protesting Duke Energy?

Blogging tips from the Best

GigaOm's Katie Fehrenbacher has a post on how some of the best bloggers got to the top.  

A lesson from the blogging elite: there are many ways to the top

 

21 HOURS AGO

1 Comment

paidContent Live 2013 Andrew Sullivan The Dish Andrew Ross Sorkin NYT Maria Popova Brain Pickings Tim Ferriss The 4-Hour Workweek
photo: Albert Chau
SUMMARY:

There’s more than one way to the top of the elite blogging ladder. Here’s lessons from four bloggerati that made it there.

The really surprising thing about a conversation with some of the blogging world’s most celebrated names is how little they actually have in common — in terms of their motivations, strategies and business models. At paidContent Live on Wednesday, Brain Picking’s Maria Popova, New York Times columnist Andrew Ross Sorkin, The Dish’s Andrew Sullivan, and web marketing guru Tim Ferriss, discussed the various reasons why they blog, and how (if at all) they monetize their web work.

Facebook's PUE and WUE Dashboard https://www.fbpuewue.com/prineville

I found the announcement for Facebook's PUE and WUE dashboard on The Register.

Bit barn efficiency metrics on a minute-by-minute basis

Free whitepaper – IT infrastructure monitoring strategies

Facebook has heaped pressure on major data center operators to be more transparent, publishing a dashboard that gives up-to-the-minute figures on the efficiency of the social network's gigantic bit barns.

But, no reference to the Facebook url.

Looked at DatacenterKnowledge, again no URL for the Facebook dashboard.

Then hit GigaOm and found the URL. 

The facilities are still under construction, and, as a result, the data in the two dashboards can have abnormalities, but it should become more stable over time. The company detailed its plans in a Thursday blog post on the Open Compute Project site.

With the blog post that the Register and DCK use to report.

A new way to report PUE and WUE

Thursday, April 18, 2013 · Posted by  at 09:10 AM

Today Facebook launched two public dashboards that report continuous, near-real-time data for key efficiency metrics – specifically, PUE and WUE – for our data centers in Prineville, OR and Forest City, NC. These dashboards include both a granular look at the past 24 hours of data and a historical view of the past year’s values. In the historical view, trends within each data set and correlations between different metrics become visible. Once our data center in Luleå, Sweden, comes online, we’ll begin publishing for that site as well.

It is a bit ironic that in a post about transparency it took me so long to find the original FB blog post and the dashboard. https://www.fbpuewue.com/prineville with one years worth of data.

NewImage

Disclosure: I work for GigaOm Pro as freelance analyst and like the fact that they embrace transparency in reporting.