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August 26, 2010

This is a joke, right?

Filed under: News,Storage — Tags: — Nate @ 7:55 am

This is a joke, right?

So today, right after the jobless claims came out, Dell came out and increased their bid for 3PAR to $24.30, thirty cents above HP’s offer, which was $6.00 above Dell’s original offer.

Even now, hours later I can’t help but laugh, I mean this is a good example showing what kind of company Dell is. Why are they wasting everyone’s time with a mere 1% increase in their bid?

A survey recently done by Reuters came up with an estimated $29 final price for 3PAR.

[..] That’s why some analysts say traditional metrics aren’t sufficient in assessing the value of 3PAR — a small company with unique technology that could grow exponentially with the the massive salesforces of either Dell or HP.

This morning on Squawk Box folks were saying the next step is for HP to bid up again and get 3PAR to eliminate the price matching clause with Dell to level the playing field.

I keep seeing people ask who needs 3PAR more. I think it’s clear Dell needs them more, Dell has nothing right now. But I’m sure Dell will do a lot to screw up the 3PAR technology over time, so HP is the better fit, more innovative company with more market leadership and of course a lot more resources from pretty much every angle.

August 23, 2010

Solaris reboot

Filed under: News — Nate @ 4:12 pm

Most everyone saw it coming but I suppose it’s more ‘official’ now, from The Register

The OpenSolaris board has suspended operations and symbolically handed all responsibly for of the open-variant of Solaris back to database giant Oracle.
[..]
Turns out now, instead of OpenSolaris being coded well ahead of the commercial Solaris, the only open source version of any future Solaris stack will come after the commercial product.

While I don’t recall what the license was, I do remember ordering copies of Solaris source code about 8-10 years ago for the company I was at (they were developing apps that ran on among other things Solaris).

Too bad OpenSolaris never really got off the ground, it was pretty close, apparently only a few things were left that were yet to be open sourced, including libc (I think – pretty critical).

While I did not like the userland tools for Solaris(and really hated patch management under Solaris 7 and 8, don’t recall 9, and never really used 10), the kernel was very impressive and solid. It would of been nice to have seen a Debian kSolaris distribution along the lines of Debian kFreeBSD.

HP to the rescue

Filed under: Datacenter,Events,News,Storage — Tags: , , , , — Nate @ 6:03 am

Knock knock.. HP is kicking down your back door 3PAR..

Well that’s more like it, HP offered $1.6 Billion to acquire 3PAR this morning topping Dell’s offer by 33%. Perhaps the 3cV solution can finally be fully backed by HP. More info from The Register here. And more info on what this could mean to HP and 3PAR products from the same source here.

3PAR’s website is having serious issues, this obviously has spawned a ton of interest in the company, I get intermittent blank pages and connection refused messages.

I didn’t wake my rep up for this one.

The 3cV solution was announced about three years ago –

Elements of the 3cV solution include:

  • 3PAR InServ® Storage Servers—highly virtualized, tiered-storage arrays built for utility computing. Organizations creating virtualized IT infrastructures for workload consolidation use InServ arrays to reduce the cost of allocated storage capacity, storage administration, and SAN infrastructure.
  • HP BladeSystem c-Class Server Blades—the leading blade server infrastructure on the market for datacenters of all sizes. HP BladeSystem c-Class server blades minimize energy and space requirements and increase administrative productivity through advantages in I/O virtualization, powering and cooling, and manageability.
  • VMware vSphere—the leading virtualization platform for industry-standard servers. VMware vSphere helps customers reduce capital and operating expenses, improve agility, ensure business continuity, strengthen security, and go green.

While I could not find the image that depicts the 3cV solution(not sure how long it’s been gone for), here is more info on it for posterity.

The Advantages of 3cV
3cV offers combined benefits that enable customers to manage and scale their server and storage environments simply, allowing them to halve server, storage and operational costs while lowering the environmental impact of the datacenter.

  • Reduces storage and server costs by 50%—The inherently modular architectures of the HP BladeSystem c-Class and the 3PAR InServ Storage Server—coupled with the increased utilization provided by VMware Infrastructure and 3PAR Thin Provisioning—allow 3cV customers to do more with less capital expenditure. As a result, customers are able to reduce overall storage and server costs by 50% or more. High levels of availability and disaster recovery can also be affordably extended to more applications through VMware Infrastructure and 3PAR thin copy technologies.
  • Cuts operational costs by 50% and increases business agility—With 3cV, customers are able to provision and change server and storage resources on demand. By using VMware Infrastructure’s capabilities for rapid server provisioning and the dynamic optimization provided by VMware VMotion and Distributed Resource Scheduler (DRS), HP Virtual Connect and Insight Control management software, and 3PAR Rapid Provisioning and Dynamic Optimization, customers are able to provision and re-provision physical servers, virtual hosts, and virtual arrays with tailored storage services in a matter of minutes, not days. These same technologies also improve operational simplicity, allowing overall server and storage administrative efficiency to increase by 3x or more.
  • Lowers environmental impact—With 3cV, customers are able to cut floor space and power requirements dramatically. Server floor space is minimized through server consolidation enabled by VMware Infrastructure (up to 70% savings) and HP BladeSystem density (up to 50% savings). Additional server power requirements are cut by 30% or more through the unique virtual power management capabilities of HP Thermal Logic technology. Storage floor space is reduced by the 3PAR InServ Storage Server, which delivers twice the capacity per floor tile as compared to alternatives. In addition, 3PAR thin technologies, Fast RAID 5, and wide striping allow customers to power and cool as much as 75% less disk capacity for a given project without sacrificing performance.
  • Delivers security through virtualization, not dedicated hardware silos—Whereas traditional datacenter architectures force tradeoffs between high resource utilization and the need for secure segregation of application resources for disparate user groups, 3cV resolves these competing needs through advanced virtualization. For instance, just as VMware Infrastructure securely isolates virtual machines on shared severs, 3PAR Virtual Domains provides secure “virtual arrays” for private, autonomous storage provisioning from a single, massively-parallel InServ Storage Server.

Though due to the recent stack wars it’s been hard for 3PAR to partner with HP to promote this solution since I’m sure HP would rather push their own full stack. Well hopefully now they can. The best of both worlds technology wise can come together.

More details from 3PAR’s VMware products site.

From HP’s offer letter

We propose to increase our offer to acquire all of 3PAR outstanding common stock to $24.00 per share in cash. This offer represents a 33.3% premium to Dell’s offer price and is a “Superior Proposal” as defined in your merger agreement with Dell. HP’s proposal is not subject to any financing contingency. HP’s Board of Directors has approved this proposal, which is not subject to any additional internal approvals. If approved by your Board of Directors, we expect the transaction would close by the end of the calendar year.

In addition to the compelling value offered by our proposal, there are unparalleled strategic benefits to be gained by combining these two organizations. HP is uniquely positioned to capitalize on 3PAR’s next-generation storage technology by utilizing our global reach and superior routes to market to deliver 3PAR’s products to customers around the world. Together, we will accelerate our ability to offer unmatched levels of performance, efficiency and scalability to customers deploying cloud or scale-out environments, helping drive new growth for both companies.
As a Silicon Valley-based company, we share 3PAR’s passion for innovation.
[..]

We understand that you will first need to communicate this proposal and your Board’s determinations to Dell, but we are prepared to execute the merger agreement immediately following your termination of the Dell merger agreement.

Music to my ears.

[tangent — begin]

My father worked for HP in the early days back when they were even more innovative than they are today, he recalled their first $50M revenue year. He retired from HP in the early 90s after something like 25-30 years.

I attended my freshman year at Palo Alto Senior High school, and one of my classmates/friends (actually I don’t think I shared any classes with him now that I think about it) was Ben Hewlett, grandson of one of the founders of HP. Along with a couple other friends Ryan and Jon played a bunch of RPGs (I think the main one was Twilight 2000, something one of my other friends Brian introduced me to in 8th grade).

I remember asking Ben one day why he took Japanese as his second language course when it was significantly more difficult than Spanish(which was the easy route, probably still is?) I don’t think I’ll ever forget his answer. He said “because my father says it’s the business language of the future..”

How times have changed.. Now it seems everyone is busy teaching their children Chinese. I’m happy knowing English, and a touch of bash and perl.

I never managed to keep in touch with my friends from Palo Alto, after one short year there I moved back to Thailand for two more years of high school there.

[tangent — end]

HP could do some cool stuff with 3PAR, they have much better technology overall, I have no doubt HP has their eyes on their HDS partnership and the possibility of replacing their XP line with 3PAR technology in the future has got to be pretty enticing. HDS hasn’t done a whole lot recently, and I read not long ago that regardless what HP says, they don’t have much (if any) input into the HDS product line.

The HP USP-V OEM relationship is with Hitachi SSG. The Sun USP-V reseller deal was struck with HDS. Mikkelsen said: “HP became a USP-V OEM in 2004 when the USP-V was already done. HP had no input to the design and, despite what they say, very little input since.” HP has been a Hitachi OEM since 1999.

Another interesting tidbit of information from the same article:

It [HDS] cannot explain why it created the USP-V – because it didn’t, Hitachi SSG did, in Japan, and its deepest thinking and reasons for doing so are literally lost in translation.

The loss of HP as an OEM customer of HDS, so soon after losing Sun as an OEM customer would be a really serious blow to HDS(one person I know claimed it accounts for ~50% of their business), whom seems to have a difficult time selling stuff in western countries, I’ve read it’s mostly because of their culture. Similarly it seems Fujitsu has issues selling stuff in the U.S. at least, they seem to have some good storage products but not much attention is paid to them outside of Asia(and maybe Europe). Will HDS end up like Fujtisu as a result of HP buying 3PAR? Not right away for sure, but longer term they stand to lose a ton of market share in my opinion.

And with the USP getting a little stale (rumor has it they are near to announcing a technology refresh for it), it would be good timing for HP to get 3PAR, to cash in on the upgrade cycle by getting customers to go with the T class arrays instead of the updated USP whenever possible.

I read on an HP blog earlier in the year an interesting comment –

The 3PAR is drastically less expensive than an XP, but is an active/active concurrent design, can scale up to 8 clustered controllers, highly virtualized, customers can self-install, self-maintain, and requires no professional services. Its on par with the XP in terms of raw performance, but has the ease of use of the EVA. Like the XP, the 3PAR can be carved up into virtual domains so that service providers or multi-tenant arrays can have delegated administration.

I still think 3PAR is worth more, and should stay independent, but given the current situation would much rather have them in the arms of HP than Dell.

Obviously those analysts that said Dell paid too much for 3PAR were wrong, and didn’t understand the value of the 3PAR technology. HP does otherwise they wouldn’t be offering 33% more cash.

After the collapse of so many of 3PAR’s NAS partners over the past couple of years, the possibility of having Ibrix available again for a longer term solution is pretty good. Dell bought Exanet’s IP earlier in the year. LSI owns Onstor, HP bought Polyserve and Ibrix. Really just about no “open” NAS players left. Isilon seems to be among the biggest NAS players left but of course their technology is tightly integrated into their disk drive systems, same with Panasas.

Maybe that recent legal investigation into the board at 3PAR had some merit after all.

Dell should take their $billion and shove it in Pillar’s(or was it Compellent ? I forgot) face, so the CEO there can make his dream of being a billion dollar storage company come true, if only for a short time.

I’m not a stock holder or anything, I don’t buy stocks(or bonds).

August 16, 2010

Congrats to Jambool

Filed under: News — Nate @ 9:03 am

I saw some news about it about a week ago but more details were revealed today from our friends at The Register. It seems they were bought out by Google. We at Techopsguys know some folks over there and are happy for them. I almost went to work for them last year they tried to recruit me, ended up recommending a friend of mind go there it seems he is pretty happy there.

So congrats to you folk at Jambool, assuming it’s what you wanted 🙂

Trying not to think about it

Filed under: News,Storage — Tags: , — Nate @ 6:54 am

Hell just got a little colder. It seems 3PAR was bought by Dell for ~$1.15 billion this morning(news is so fresh as of this posting the official 3PAR press release isn’t posted yet, just a blank page).. I woke my rep up and asked him what happened and he wasn’t aware that it had gone down, they did a good job at keeping it quiet.

It’s not like 3PAR was in any trouble, they had no debt, and the highest margins in the industry along with good sales. They haven’t been making too much profits mainly because they are hiring so many new people to grow the company. In my area since I started using 3PAR they’ve gone from 1 Sales and 1 SE to 3 Sales and 2 SEs, and they’ve really expanded over seas and stuff. I would of expected them to hold out for a few more billion, $1 seems far too cheap.

I have read several complaints about how Equallogic has gone downhill since Dell bought them (from original Equallogic users, not that I’ve ever used that stuff so don’t know whether or not they are accurate), I fear the same may happen to 3PAR. But it will take a little while for it to start.

I think the only hope 3PAR has at this point is if Dell keeps them independent for as long as possible. Outside of their DCS division Dell really shows they have no ability to innovate.

I wonder what Marc Farley thinks, as a former Equallogic/Dell employee now he’s at 3PAR, and Dell came and found him again..

Maybe I’ll get lucky and this will just turn out to be a bad dream, some evil hacker out there manipulating the stock price by planting news.

Do me one favor Dell, stay the hell away from Extreme Networks! With Brocade having bought Foundry, HP having bought 3COM. I was told by a Citrix guy that Juniper tried to buy Extreme shortly after they bought Netscreen instead of making their own switches, from what I recall he said Juniper bought Netscreen for $500M which was way over inflated, and Extreme demanded $1 billion at the time. There’s not many other Enterprise/Service provider independent Ethernet companies still around. There is Force10, Dell can go buy them be a lot cheaper too.

I suppose more than anything else, Dell buying 3PAR is Dell admitting the Equallogic technology doesn’t hold a candle to 3PAR technology, ok maybe a candle but not much more than that!

It may be 6:51AM but I think I need a drink.

July 26, 2010

Dell settles with the SEC

Filed under: News — Tags: , , , , — Nate @ 8:52 am

This story makes me sick. Everyone in the industry knew it was going on, several years ago Intel was paying off their customers to stick to their products, and not deploy the superior Opteron processors. Intel’s strategy to convert the world to Itanium was going down in flames thanks to AMD’s extension of x86 – x86-64, combine that with a superior hardware architecture derived from the Alpha (and created by many former engineers who worked on the Alpha – AMD hired many of them). Whether it was the hypertransport design, the itnegrated memory controllers, multi core designs. In so many areas AMD was showing such massive innovations the only way Intel could respond at the time was by paying their customers to not use their stuff.

In no place was it more obvious than Dell. A company that myself I’ve never had respect for for other reasons(biggest being they don’t innovate at all outside of their supply chain). Dell was the only big OEM that did not use AMD processors at all for the longest time.

The Register has posted a couple of articles on this recently with Dell settling with the SEC for a mere $100M.

What upsets me more than anything else, is not the fact that this went on, but the pocket change of penalties that resulted. Intel paid AMD $1.25 billion to settle all outstanding legal cases last year, a small fraction that otherwise should of been paid. Dell pays only $100M, maybe that’s enough for the SEC, but on anti trust grounds it should be far more. $100M is not a deterrent. It accounts for a small fraction of what Intel paid them!

Same goes for the settlement Intel paid to AMD, I have absolutely no doubt, as you should have none as well, that Intel benefited FAR more than the $1 billion paid to AMD. It should of been $10 billion, if not higher. Intel wrote that settlement off in one quarter!

It really is depressing to see these big companies get away with this sort of thing. Whether it’s Dell, or Intel, or the recent Goldman Sachs SEC settlement. The penalties are pocket change compared to what they should be to make it a real deterrent. And moreover, individuals are not punished in a lot of cases, the company takes the hit, and of course in all cases nobody ever admits any wrong doing. Goldman, like Intel wrote their settlement off in one quarter!

Dell wasn’t alone, we all knew it but no other OEM was being so blatenly obvious in their strategy.

Intel’s rebates amounted to 38 per cent of Dell’s operating profit in the fiscal year 2006, and rose to 76 per cent (or $720m) in one quarter alone, Q1 2007. While almost all of the Intel funds were incorporated into Dell’s component costs, Dell did not disclose the existence, much less the magnitude, of the Intel exclusivity payments.

[..]

New York State’s lawsuit suggests that the reach of the funding was wide indeed. It alleges that IBM benefited by $130m from Intel simply for not launching an AMD product. HP benefited by almost $1bn. Again, you might suppose Intel might have found better use for such resources – such as R&D.

A lot of the big companies do this sort of thing, it’s a wonder that tech startups even bother to start up anymore when there is really nobody keeping the playing field fair. One other similar despicable business deal which I was informed from two different people on both sides of the table was a networking deal Cisco was competing with AT&T for along with some other vendors. AT&T was(and probably still is) the largest user and re-seller of Cisco gear. The competition was the obvious players there’s only so many out there! Anyways the deal went down, Cisco lost hands down on many accounts. Their technology just isn’t competitive in so many areas. So how did Cisco respond? They came back to AT&T with 95% off list pricing. They bought the business. They didn’t win on any real merits, they took a major loss on the deal, which will result in all of their other customers having to continue to pay more to compensate for that. That just makes me sick.

But nothing seems to be on such a grand scale as what Intel did to keep AMD at bay. It was shocking to me seeing the pundits saying “oh well the consumer wasn’t hurt by those practices”, not taking into account how close AMD came to the brink, with their massive(still massive!) amount of debt they have incurred over the years. An incredible market opportunity for them was there for several years, something Intel kept small by throwing cash at their customers because they had nothing else to offer.

Intel can’t afford to lose AMD from an anti trust standpoint, but they also don’t want them to succeed too much, a pretty fine line they walk.

June 21, 2010

HP BL685c G7 Launched – Opteron 6100

Filed under: News,Virtualization — Tags: , , , , — Nate @ 10:22 am

I guess my VMware dream machine will remain a dream for now, HP launched their next generation G7 Opteron 6100 blades today, and while still very compelling systems, after the 6100 launched I saw the die size had increased somewhat (not surprising), it was enough to remove the ability to have 4 CPU sockets AND 48 memory slots on one full height blade.

Still a very good comparison illustrating the elimination of the 4P tax, that is eliminating the premium associated with quad socket servers. If you configure a BL485c G7 with 2×12-core CPUs and 128GB of memory(about $16,000), vs a BL685c G7 with 256GB of memory and the 4×12-core CPUs (about $32,000), the cost is about the same, no premium.

By contrast configuring a BL685c G6 with six core CPUs (e.g. half the number of cores as the G7), same memory, same networking, same fiber channel, the cost is roughly $52,000.

These have new Flex Fabric 2 NICs, which from the specs page seem to indicate they include iSCSI or FCoE support (I assume some sort of software licensing needed to unlock the added functionality? though can’t find evidence of it). Here is a white paper on the Flex Fabric stuff, from what I gather it’s just an evolutionary step of Virtual Connect. Myself of course have never had any real interest in FCoE (search the archives for details), but nice I suppose that HP is giving the option to those that do want to jump on that wagon.

June 15, 2010

Next generation SSD

Filed under: News,Storage — Nate @ 4:04 am

Another interesting article from our friends at The Register. This one talking about a new startup which is promising SLC-like peformance and reliability for MLC-like prices.

[..]

says the 200GB product has a five-year endurance at 2TB/day write data and the 400GB model a five-year endurance at 4TB/day. This is with random, non-compressible data.

[..]

Genesis has a 3Gbit/s SATA interface and has a 30,000 random read IOPS rating (4KB blocks), and a 20,000 random write IOPS rating. It provides 180MB/s sustained write and 220MB/s sustained read bandwidth.

Certainly looks interesting, not nearly as fast (or reliable) as say Fusion IO SLC or MLC for that matter, but probably a bit cheaper too.

June 14, 2010

Sea Micro launches 512 core Atom server

Filed under: News,Virtualization — Nate @ 7:55 pm

An article from our friends at The Register talks about a new server design to hit the market. A very innovative solution from a recently decloaked stealth startup Sea Micro based on the Intel Atom processor, called the SM 10000.

Looks to be targetted at the hyperscale arena, SGI tried something similar to this last year with their Microslice design, though it’s not nearly as efficient as this box is.

The SM1000 is a fairly radical departure from current designs, perhaps the closest design I’ve come across to this SM monster is a design from Dell’s DCS division a few years ago that The Register reported on. This goes several steps beyond that by including in a single 10U chassis:

  • Up to 512 Atom CPUs each with up to 2GB memory
  • Up to 64  x 2.5″ disks
  • Integrated ethernet switching and load balancing
  • Integrated terminal server
  • Virtualized I/O

This is targetted to a specific application – mainly web serving. The massive amount of parallelism in the system combined with the low power foot print (a mere 4W/server) can provide a high amount of throughput for many types of web applications. The ability to have SSDs in the system allow high I/O rates for smaller data sets.

From one of their white papers:

[..]hardware-based CPU I/O virtualization enables SeaMicro to eliminate 90 percent of the components from the server and to shrink the motherboard to the size of a credit card. Hundreds of these low-power, card-sized computational units are tied together with a supercomputer-style fabric to create a massive array of independent but linked computational units. Work is then distributed over these hundreds of CPUs via hardware- and software-based load-balancing technology that dynamically directs load to ensure that each of the CPUs is either in its most efficient zone of performance or is sleeping. The key technologies reside in three chips of SeaMicro’s design, one ASIC and two FPGAs, and in the management, routing, and load-balancing software that directs traffic across the fabric.

It’s clearly targeted at the scale out web serving market, the likes of Google, Facebook, Yahoo. These aren’t general purpose servers, I saw some stupid posts on Slashdot mentioning trying to run VMware on or something on top of this. The system is virtualized at the hardware level, there’s no need for a software hypervisor running on top.

From another white paper, talking about the virtualized disk technology:

The SeaMicro SM10000 can be configured with 0 to 64 2.5 inch SATA hard disk drives (HDD) or solid state drives (SSD). The 512 CPUs in the system can be allocated portions of a disk or whole disks. A physical disk (HDD or SSD) can be divided into multiple virtual disks – from 2GB to the maximum capacity of the disk – and assigned to one or more CPUs. Data resiliency is maintained by marking a disk to be part of a RAID pool or by assigning multiple disks to a CPU. The system can be configured to run with or without disk, ensuring the flexibility to appropriately provision storage for the desired applications

My only questions at this stage would be:

  • How well does it work? Not knowing the internals of where they got their ethernet switching or load balancing technology from, or even RAID technology.
  • Their CPU of choice is 32-bit. For many workloads this is fine, though many others need 64bit.
  • Questions on how the shared disks work – you have the ability to take a SSD for example and put shared application code on a read only portion of the disk that can be read by as many servers in the system as you want, I suppose to take maximum advantage of the technology in the system you may have to make some changes to your application(s), it would be cool if they offered the ability to have the shared disk be writable by more than one system, using a cluster file system or something. Maybe this is possible I don’t know.

A Base configuration starts at about $139,000 according to The Register. No mention of what that includes though.

Certainly seems to be a system that has a lot of promise for the market it is targetted towards!

Did I ever mention I love technology?

May 29, 2010

Tapped out

Filed under: General,News — Nate @ 12:20 pm

An interesting article on slashdot posted in reference to water shortages and companies like Intel and Coke consuming large amounts of water that might otherwise be used for farming.

About 2.4 billion people live in “water-stressed” countries such as China, according to a 2009 report by the Pacific Institute, an Oakland, California-based nonprofit scientific research group

[..]

China’s 1.33 billion people each have 2,117 cubic meters of water available per year, compared with 1,614 cubic meters in India and as much as 9,943 cubic meters in the U.S., according to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations.

Nothing new really if you have been paying attention for the past few years. I really try very hard to keep this blog as technical as possible no matter how strong my emotions are to rant against the government and society in general, in this case I’ll venture a bit outside of the technical realm thanks to the above article mentioning Intel’s water intensive business.

Another water intensive business is data centers, perhaps one of the more extreme examples is the SuperNap outside Las Vegas, where one person is quoted as saying it will require millions of gallons of water per day:

“They’re in the middle of the desert and will need almost 3 million gallons of water per day for blowdown and evaporation for their 30,000 ton evaporative cooling plant.”

While I can’t vouch for the sources, just take a look at where some people think we are headed as far as global population growth is concerned, and notice similar trend lines from those that are in the global warming camp, and even more similar trend lines from those reporting on U.S. debt.

I’ll end the tangent here, but you can probably get an idea of where our civilization is headed.

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