Getting Ready for IBM Edge 2013

by Administrator on May 23, 2013

We are closing in on IBM Edge 2013, a multi-track edutainment event focused on Big Blue storage technology taking place at Mandalay Bay Resort in Las Vegas from June 9 through June 14.  The event reprises a very interesting and informative show staged closer to my house in Florida last year about this time.  I delivered six Technical Edge sessions covering Disaster Recovery and Business Continuity Planning in 2012 and I guess my reviews were sufficiently positive to be invited back this year to deliver three sessions on data protection, one on tape and Linear Tape File System, and to participate in a panel discussion on social media.

Cliché as it may sound, I am looking forward to this trip – despite the grueling schedule leading up to the show and while on site.  I found the first one, in 2012, to be one of the best shows, from a signal to noise standpoint, of all vendor sponsored events I had attended…ever.

I am also going to Edge 2013 with my journalist hat on.  For one thing, I will be lugging my video camera with me to do some interviews, I hope, with some IBM smart guys.  I am especially interested in learning more about

  • Progress on IBM’s multiple storage management initiatives – and I mean multiple.  Between their Tivoli Storage Manager, their Storage Director product, the storage cloud/software-defined storage stuff they are talking about on webinars that leverages SVC, and whatever progress they have made with Project Zero (enabling RESTful management of IBM gear), I find it difficult to discern a coherent strategy for storage management.  Maybe some big data analytics are aimed at storage infrastructure?
  • Speaking of Big Data, have we gotten any closer to brain-mimicking algorithms for sorting data and learning from it over time?  If Jeff Jonas is there, maybe I can get him to talk about it.
  • Of course, LTFS (IMHO) is the most important development in storage technology in years.  I know that the uptake of the technology has been good in Broadcast and Pre/Post Media Editing, but are we seeing it going anywhere in other verticals?  Also, what’s up with the noise around all other storage BUT tape?  This year, I have heard a lot from IBM about FLASH storage (leveraging the purchase recently made of Texas Memory Instruments, I guess), and the new boss of IBM storage gave an interesting interview to El Reg at The Register not long ago where he suggested that IBM (like EMC and everyone else) was seeing momentum toward an all FLASH storage paradigm.  Scary thought, that.
  • So, is disk dead? (Hardly think so.) Is the future capture storage all FLASH, and retention storage is all TAPE?  That is an interesting idea?  Also, what does IBM think about the FLASH hype:  can server hypervisors REALLY see their speeds and feeds improved by caching them with FLASH – or is this just so much spoofing?
  • Speaking of which, an IBM partner/technology provider at the show is intriguing me with the idea that they have surmounted the challenges of latency in wide area networks.  Has Einstein met his match, or is the vendor’s PR organization overstating the case?  I’ll find out.

I will try to put as many of these questions to IBMers on camera, and maybe get a few customers to share their views as well.  All will be posted here, together with some conventional blogs and my on-going live tweets about the show.

On a related tangent, Gartner was quoted in Processor.com on May 3 on pg. 17 of their print publication – Hey, I like newspapers; beats training puppies with an iPad! – to the effect that just 10% of business social media initiatives succeed.  IBM has one of the best social media teams in the industry and either proves or disproves Gartner’s thesis, depending on what you see as the goals of social media.

As a business tool for IBM, social media provides great inroads through the often confusing morass of IBM technology initiatives and product announcements, webinars and events, management and strategy change-ups and refits.  Basically, you would have to spend weeks on their web sites to find what you are seeking.  With IBM social media, I only need to tweet a question to get all of the links I need.  I call that successful.

Anyway, I am heading to IBM Edge on the 9th.  I hope some of you are, too.  Here’s the registration page.

 

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Continuing VA Saga

by Administrator on May 22, 2013

A couple of posts back, I shared a letter I had sent to Sen. Bill Nelson of Florida.  Variants of the same letter my other Florida Senator, Marco Rubio, and to the POTUS.  I have yet to hear back from those folks, but I was kind of disappointed in the Nelson response this week.

A bit of background.

Once upon a time, I worked in a Florida Senator’s office as an intern.  It was a college gig and taught me many valuable lessons.  My main job was to read incoming constituent mail, then complete a form that would drive a computerized response.

Basically, I dissected what the sender was saying, then looked through a binder of predefined paragraphs organized by topic, selecting the ones that were responsive to each of the constituent’s questions or observations.  I used a form to write down a code numbers corresponding to each selected paragraph, then stapled or paper-clipped the form to the mail and put it in the out box.  At some point, the out box contents were sent down to a mail assembly room where each coded response was inserted into a document printer, the letter was printed, and the Senator’s signature was “franked” onto the doc before it was put in an envelope and sent out to the constituent.

Bottom line:  I know how most constituent mail is processed by Congressional offices, and I was not really so naive as to believe that a busy Senator or his legislative aids were going to take my mail seriously.  Still, there was nothing in the mail that suggested that Senator Nelson was even interested in what we were proposing.  Instead, I got a list of legislation that he had proposed to work the problem and a motherhood consideration or two about veterans and what we owe them.

I guess I was simply handled by an intern.

I will be interested to see whether Mr. Rubio or Mr. Obama, or their staff, provide a more engaging response.  I am not holding my breath.  Last I heard, the government is planning to spend several more billion on the problem — the current billions having failed to do much at all about the healthcare claims backlog.

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Catching Up

by Administrator on May 22, 2013

Between seasonal allergies and clients facing disaster events, it has been one heck of a Spring 2013. A little over a week ago, I was in Chicago at an event hosted by a large storage technology distributor aimed at building a fire under its customers, reseller/integrators. Paid for, I take it, by a large storage equipment vendor whose products my host distributes, I was not surprised to see so much of the agenda dedicated to sessions exploring the sponsor’s technologies and products – especially how to position them against competitor technologies and products.

These kinds of events are a fascinating departure from end user events that I tend to frequent. It is fascinating to see how consumers are characterized and targeted by folks who make their livings pushing tin and spinning rust.

First takeaway:

I am a “non-believer” in the parlance of one speaker. That means I am somewhat technical and prefer to question the value proposition and operational claims about products rather than merely taking the salesperson’s word for it.

For example, if a vendor rep or sales droid says that adding a tier of FLASH storage to their rig is “the best thing since sliced bread,” I don’t simply take their word for it. I want to understand how FLASH-ifying anything provides greater throughput, especially if the log jam blocking I/O is a crappy LSI Logic controller emulation embedded in a microkernel of a prominent server hypervisor software package. Memory is good, SSD may have its place, but they aren’t a panacea. Moreover, I want someone to prove their product to me, not just sell it to me.

Apparently, front office folks – and zombified fan boys – aren’t inclined to make the sales droid work for his dinner. If I am a non-believer, they must be cultists.

Another takeaway:

There is a big and growing gap between capacity demand (spiking high and to the right) and IT budgets (flat line or trending lower). I agree with this view. What I find difficult to believe is the vendor’s claim that the gap can be closed by deploying XYZ array that features thin provisioning and some other value add software (compression, de-dupe, whatever) on its controller. The vendor uses this explanation:

 

 

The above illustration is from my Storage Decisions keynote address and summarizes the vendor pitch. The vendor says that monolithic storage is wasteful, with only 10% of its capacity used for the purpose intended – to store lots of bits. The middle tank is modular storage, which gives us greater allocation efficiency – about 40%. At the end is product XYZ that brings lots of controller-based value add functionality to the party, delivering 90% allocation efficiency – which the vendor refers to (in error) as “utilization efficiency.” Well, clearly, we need more of XYZ platform to fill the void between greater capacity requirements and no budget.

If you are like me, your jaw is now hanging open further than the shark in the picture. But this is a metaphor you can expect to hear from your favorite solution integrator sales rep in the coming months.

Anyway, I am hard at work prepping for Storage Decisions in Chicago on June 12 and for IBM Edge 2013 in Vegas from June 9th through the 14th. To be at both events will take a bit of doing. If the gods of air travel are with me, and I still have enough gumption to function without a lot of sleep, I will manage to be in two places in nearly the same time.

Hope to see you there.

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Not that I Don’t Trust You

by Administrator on April 15, 2013

We just completed great editions of our “New Rules:  Backup and Data Protection” seminar in Atlanta and Dallas last week.  (Thank you, Trish, from TechTarget for your great logistics and on-site management, and thanks to all who attended the events.)  At the Dallas event, I was struck by a funny happenstance…

Dallas was the first city, I believe, in which TechTarget loosened its rules and allowed sponsors to sit in the back seats and view the seminar.  Prior to this, they had to stay out of the room and listen with a glass through the wall or something.

Anyway, TechTarget asked me if I would mind letting them in, and I courageously agreed.  Truth be told:  I routinely piss off vendors (well, their marketing droids more than their engineering staff) with what I write; so, why not let them hear the words as they flow “trippingly from my tongue?”  It didn’t dawn on me until after the second hour of my three hour talk, when everyone adjourned to the vendor display area for lunch, that I had said critical things about cloud storage and cloud backup at an event where three of the four vendor sponsors were promoting cloud storage or cloud backup.  Honestly, I don’t naturally think of cloud when I think of IBM, or EMC, or Dell, or whatever.  However, this cloud verbiage was showing up on their signage.

Let me state my current thinking about clouds.

First, the term “cloud” has zero probative value and is a marketing term only — like software-defined networks, software-defined storage, storage area network, enterprise storage, tier zero, etc.  If I had my way, it would be stricken from the vocabulary of technology.

Second, private cloud appears to be a synonym for “managed infrastructure” — at least as it applies to idiotic terms like IaaS (infrastructure as a service), PaaS (no, not the egg coloring kit for Easter, but platform as a service), SaaS (storage, rather than software, as a service — I guess the software guys need another acronym; maybe AaaS).  The “as a service” thing suggests that we provide resources on a contract basis and in some sort of atomic unit of compute with an associated cost.  So, if I want to roll out 50 virtual desktops, I might obtain one unit of DataCore Software’s new virtualization appliance kit; 2 if I want 100, etc.  DataCore provides the software to manage the delivery of performance, capacity and protection in a predictable and manageable way in a private LAN/SAN setting.  To paraphrase Geico, provisioning virtual desktops with their technology is so simple even a neanderthal can do it.

Unfortunately, neither VMware nor other server layer hypervisors are as predictable.  Storage is simpler to virtualize than servers, I guess, due to the complexity of server workload relative to the simplicity of storage I/O.  (I am trying to be generous here.)

Management, ideally, should occur both at the level of plumbing and kit, and also at an abstracted layer that refers to services.  When I provision storage from my virtual storage pool, again enabled by DataCore, I am able to apply appropriate data protection services simply by checking tick boxes for CDP, snapshot, mirroring, etc. — that is, whatever services I want to extend to the data occupying this allocated storage.  The workload in question automatically receives network load balancing, performance improving caching (using DRAM in the server and FLASH if you so desire) and thin provisioning of capacity (across all spindles in the pool, rather than isolated to one stand of disk drives as in on-array thin provisioning).  These are services and their provisioning is theoretically so easy that users could do it themselves.  Very cloud like.

Beneath the services layer, however, I am careful to ensure that I have plumbing and kit management — the best being X-IO’s on array RESTful management.

Because everything happens inside the corporate firewalls, private clouds are thought to be more secure (hmm — or at least less prone to external interference than by inside ne’redowells), more likely to meet SLAs, and more capable of allocating and deallocating resources to workload from shared resource pools (maybe, if it is a mainframe:  x86 tinkertoys?  Not so agile.)

Public clouds, by contrast, could not possibly deliver security or a reliable SLA.  Why?  Because the ability to deliver secure dependable service is outside the hands of the cloud provider’s hands.  Most cloud providers I have spoken to are very earnest souls — meaning, they think they are on the cusp of a new wave of technology and that they are delivering a very valuable service to what few customers they have thus far been able to garner (88% of public storage cloud capacity are serving PaaS and IaaS vendors, not consumers!).

The fact is that the only way to keep data safe in a public network is not to put it there.  Moreover, despite your earnest desire to deliver an SLA, you are at the mercy of WAN connections and last mile connections, which are very much subject to jitter, latency, failure, maintenance downtime, etc.  If I am not mistaken, and please correct me if I am, all of the special QoS guarantees promised by switch vendors fall apart if data routes through a series of hops that include even one off-brand router in path:  so much for your bandwidth optimization and slip-stream technologies to expedite I/O across WAN links.  Moreover, WANs follow their own version of open shortest path first — an invitation to latency given that the “shortest path” refers to # of router hops not physical distance.  Bottom line:  as demonstrated by many problems with Amazon and other cloudies, the network is the boss, not the service provider.  Anyone who tells you anything else is pulling your leg.

Another fact:  IPvAC (IP over Avian Carrier) remains a faster way to deliver large amounts of data over distance than any WAN.

Then we get to another obvious point:  there are few if any real standards in the world of Clouds.  If anything, the momentum in IaaS and PaaS is running against standardization.  Instead, cloudies are teaming up with one server hypervisor stack peddler or another, setting the stage for cloud conflicts.  Clouds are server hypervisor battles writ large.  So much for the ENRON-like dream of sourcing commodity storage or servers from a “futures market” of providers on a spot pricing basis.

Finally, I have a clear recollection of a fellow back in the 70s who was selling hot site contracts for a facility that didn’t really exist.  His rubes never checked to confirm what they were paying for and all wrote checks for $25K or more that he cashed and took with him to a non-extradition country, where he lived happily ever after.  I encourage anyone seeking the services of a cloud provider to actually visit the facility that is being advertised.  Check to see whether the firm consists of a real “tier 1″ data center (or two, or three), or if the infrastructure is a beat up rack of Dell servers purchased on eBay stood up in a cage at some ISP or managed hosting vendor’s shop.  Find out how they are protecting your data while it is in their charge.  Make them restore data as a test.  In short, make sure that they are doing everything (and more) that you would do to platform, protect and archive the data from your systems.  While I can’t cite any independent surveys, I suspect that very few folks are doing  the due diligence that should be done before you outsource your data assets (and your control) to a third party.

Frankly, I hate all of the hype around clouds.  Claims of huge increases in cloud adoption, written by “analysts” who are being paid by the service providers and leveraging surveys of fewer than 20 respondents — half of whom are vendor plants, are finding their way into publications as “editorial” content.  They aren’t.

Lacking is any reference to history:  in the 80s, during a recession, we saw an interest in Service Bureau computing that waned shortly after the associated recession turned over; in the 90s, there was the phenom we called ASP/SSP (application service providers and storage service providers), all of which failed after the associated downturn in the economy (associated with the dotcom meltdown) was replaced by the housing bubble.

Today’s cloud stuff may very well be just another manifestation of the same historical phenomena.  If I am right, it is already starting to fizzle.

Anyway, that is what I had to say about clouds.  No offense to any sponsors, and I hope you will all prove me to be a complete idiot — out of touch with the real world trends that will shape tomorrow’s IT.  I kind of doubt it.

 

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Call to Action

April 13, 2013

Some of my friends who read this blog know that I lost my father a month or so ago.  He was aged and infirmed, and has gone to a better place, I’m sure.  But in his final years, we were frequently challenged by our interaction with the VA’s medical claims and records keeping processes.  Dad’s [...]

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The Old In-and-Out

March 24, 2013

Just got back from Brussels and Storage Expo 2013.  Ivo and company did a great job and the event was top notch.  IBM’s storage rock star, Tony Pearson, was there and in great form — doing eight sessions over two days.  (I did the opening keynote on Day 1.) I hope to see more of [...]

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Low Price, Technically Acceptable

March 8, 2013

Got an email from an old editor of mine, Nick Wakefield of Washington Technology, inviting me to a webcast on Low Price Technically Acceptable Contracts, presumably aimed at Fed contractors.  Here was the invite, which I post as a courtesy to Nick… Surviving Lowest Price Technically Acceptable IT Projects: Maximize your Returns and Customer Satisfaction [...]

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Important Development at CeBIT 2013 That US Readers May Not Have Heard About

March 7, 2013

DataCore Software, a fellow Florida-based company, used CeBIT 2013 to announce the first “productization” of the remarkable work that CTO and Chairman of the Board, Ziya Aral, and his team having been doing with virtual desktop infrastructure.  We have blogged about DataCore’s VDI research here before and even posted some video interviews with Aral. What [...]

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Preparations Under Way for Storage Decisions

March 6, 2013

I get to do a keynote on cutting storage costs…   The other session covers LTFS and other tape technology developments that are driving the technology back to the forefront…   However it all works out, I will see you at SD in Chicago, NYC and San Francisco over the coming months.

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Signal and Noise

March 6, 2013

While I wasn’t in the room to hear the comment directly, IBM’s new storage chief, Ambuj Goyal, is reported by The Register to have stated that his objective was to move transaction storage away from disk to all-flash arrays.  Ultimately, he envisions an IBM that sells less storage. Later in the article, he clarifies that [...]

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