Thursday, March 11, 2010

SolidNode

Just another WordPress weblog

At DataCenterDynamics New York

Posted by Blogger On March - 3 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

On Wednesday (March 3) I’ll be attending DataCenterDynamics New York conference at the New York Hilton. The DCD team says there are more than 1,000 people registered for the show, so it should be a busy event. I’ll be posting updates and observations throughout the day via our @datacenter channel on Twitter (be sure to follow us if you haven’t already). You can also follow all attendee Tweets from the event by searching or following the #dcdnyc2010 hashtag. Not to worry – we’ll also have our usual daily diet of data center stories on Wednesday, plus post-event coverage of the DataCenterDynamics show later this week.

Original post:
At DataCenterDynamics New York

Popularity: 4% [?]

Internap Expands in Silicon Valley, Houston

Posted by admin On March - 2 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Internap Network Services (INAP) will expand its data center space in Silicon Valley and Houston, the company said today. The moves will help Internap continue a transition of its colocation footprint from partner facilities to company-controlled data center space.   

Internap said it will add 27,000 square feet of new space in Silicon Valley, where the company operates four data centers in San Jose, Calif. The company will spend $23 million to build the new space in two phases, with the 14,000 square foot first phase scheduled to come online in the third quarter of 2010.

CEO Eric Cooney said the Silicon Valley market offers a “compelling opportunity for Internap” due to strong demand for space and an experienced local sales force.  

Internap will spend $5 million to add 5,000 square feet of space in its existing data center in Houston, which is nearing capacity. The company also provided an update on the Seattle expansion announced in November. The first phase of 7,500 square feet will open for customers in the third quarter of 2010. 

Internap said its move to focus on company-controlled colocation space has already helped its profit margin in its colocation business, which has improved from, 25 percent in the second quarter of 2008 to 30 percent in the fourth quarter. Seasonal variations in power pricing also helped the company’s margins.  

“Our data center value proposition is built on our ability to offer premium data center space and IP services,” said Cooney. “We’re well-equipped to compete, and our track record in company-controlled colo space reflects our capacity for growth.”

Original post:
Internap Expands in Silicon Valley, Houston

Popularity: 1% [?]

TelecityGroup Adds Space in Frankfurt

Posted by admin On March - 2 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

TelecityGroup today announced plans to build approximately 4,000 square meters (43,000 square feet) of data centre capacity with 6 megawatts of customer power in Frankfurt, becoming the latest data center provider to announce an expansion in the European finance hub.

This will be the second expansion for TelecityGroup’s Frankfurt facility in less than a year, as it added 1.5MW of power capacity last autumn. The company said it continues to see growing demand in Frankfurt, where Equinix also recently announced an expansionand Savvis has outlined plans for a new facility.

“Germany is a major Internet market, with extremely high broadband penetration and bandwidth usage,” said Martin Essig, Managing Director TelecityGroup Germany. “The Internet has expanded into every facet of our business and personal lives – from hosting virtual meetings to watching a favourite TV show – and this increase in online services is driving demand for high-quality carrier neutral data centre capacity.”

Headquartered in London, TelecityGroupoperates 23 network independent data centres across seven European countries, including Amsterdam, Dublin, Frankfurt, London, Manchester, Milan, Paris and Stockholm. Telecity Group plc is listed on the London Stock Exchange (LSE: TCY).

Original post:
TelecityGroup Adds Space in Frankfurt

Popularity: 1% [?]

Here’s a roundup of some of some of this week’s headlines from the data center and hosting industry:

Fujitsu & Japan AEA Unveil Supercomputer. On Monday Fujitsu announced that it has  completed joint development of a new supercomputer system with the Japan Atomic Energy Agency (JAEA). Clocking in at 186.1 teraflops, the new system is the fastest supercomputer in Japan, based on the November 2009 Top500list of supercomputers.  One of the systems in the supercomputer is a large-scale parallel computation unit, which uses Fujitsu’s latest blade server, PRIMERGY BX900, in a configuration of 2,134 nodes (4,268 CPUs, 17,072 cores) connected using the latest InfiniBand QDR high-speed interconnect technology.  Using the LINPACK benchmark, the new system would place first among the Japanese entries posted and 19th in the world on the TOP500 list.

Force 10 Networks Achieves Highest Port Density. Force10 Networks announced the availability of a new 40-port line-card for its ExaScale virtualized core switch/router platform, setting a new benchmark for 10 Gigabit Ethernet port density. The new 40-port line card increases density on the ExaScale E1200 virtualized core switch/router to 560 10 GigE ports in a single half-rack chassis.  Parks Fields, manager at Scalable Systems Engineering at Los Alamos National Lab noted “high performance computing environments call for density, performance and reliability in the smallest energy-efficient footprint possible.  Force10 Networks continues to offer leadership in this area.”  Pricing for the 40-port 10 GigE line-card starts at $97,500 and will begin shipping in the second quarter of 2010.

Ciena Powers AboveNet’s Ultra-Low Latency Network.Network specialist Ciena announced that AboveNet has deployed Ciena’s 2RS module for the CN 4200 FlexSelect Advanced Services Platform as a part of the service provider’s recently introduced Agility Guarantee program, which provides industry-leading ultra-low latency service level agreements. The Agility Guarantee program allows AboveNet to offer a network solution that delivers round-trip latencies as low as sub-1 millisecond for some services.  “AboveNet is a long-time customer that has chosen Ciena to be among the select few vendors to provide equipment to support its network,” said Mike Aquino, Senior Vice President of Global Field Operations at Ciena. “The deployment of Ciena’s 2RS modules on AboveNet’s base of CN 4200s underscores the ongoing value of that network investment and our mutual goal of enabling high-capacity, low-latency connectivity for end customers.”

Original post:
Roundup: Fujitsu’s New Super, Force 10, Ciena

Popularity: 1% [?]

Sentinel Plans Large NJ Data Center

Posted by Blogger On March - 1 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Sentinel Data Centers and Russo Development have begun construction on a large multi-tenant data center facility in Somerset, New Jersey, the companies announced today. The companies have acquired a 22.5 acre site with an existing 230,000 square foot single-story structure, expandable to 330,000 square feet.

The project brings together two experienced players in the data center market. Sentinel operated three data centers in Massachusetts and Connecticut, which the company just sold to Digital Realty Trust. Russo has specialized in construction of single-tenant data center buildings for financial companies in North Jersey. 

Pursuing Wholesale Model
The new data center in Somerset will offer up to 160,000 square feet of wholesale data center space to enterprise customers. Sentinel has started construction on a dedicated on-site 69kV power substation, which will be supported by diverse paths from two transmission-grade utility switching stations, providing more than 40 megawatts of power to the facility.

“We have incorporated best practices from our eight-year delivery history and recent advancements in data center design into a state-of-the-art facility that we are extremely excited about,” said Josh Rabina, co-president of Sentinel Data Centers. “We have worked hard to optimize a product for the large-footprint user that is as robust and energy efficient as current technology enables and also provides ultimate flexibility for users to add capacity on demand without incurring up-front over-sizing costs due to forecast
uncertainty.”

Russo Development will be a “substantial ownership partner” in Sentinel’s New Jersey project, and will handle site preparation work for the data center.

“We are thrilled to have Russo as a partner in our New Jersey facility,” said Todd Aaron, co-president of Sentinel Data Centers. “Russo is a like-minded organization with a tremendous track record of delivering quality product in New Jersey and we believe its site and shell development skill sets are a perfect complement to our turn-key fit-out and operational capabilities.”

Sees Financial, Pharma Demand
Sentinel’s experience in the data center sector will help it identify tenants for the new facility, Rabina said, most likely from the financial and pharmaceutical sector. “We have a lot of relationships in the financial sector, and pharma’s beena  great market for us,” he said.

Rabina sees the ideal customer for the Sentinel project as an enterprise client that has a need for short-term space and long-term expansion. “We think there’s a model for companies who are at wholesale scale but need to buy additional capacity on demand,” said Rabina. “I think New Jersey’s a strong market for this model.”

Original post:
Sentinel Plans Large NJ Data Center

Popularity: 1% [?]

Roundup: ReliaCloud, enStratus, HP, Intel

Posted by Blogger On March - 1 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Here’s a roundup of some of some of this week’s headlines from the data center and hosting industry:

ReliaCloud Offers enStratus Management Platform.  Cloud provider ReliaCloud announced a new partnership with enStratus, a national cloud management platform that delivers governance for enterprise applications in the cloud. ReliaCloud is a product of Minnesota managed hosting and data center provider VISI. ReliaCloud customers now have access to a suite of software management tools from enStratus that are also used with Amazon Web Services, Rackspace and Microsoft Azure platforms. ”The highly regarded management platform and experience in cloud security and availability management at enStratus is invaluable to regulation-heavy businesses or enterprises that are concerned about reliability and business continuity,” said Jason Baker, chief technology officer for ReliaCloud.  ReliaCloud and enStratus will be hosting the Minneapolis CloudCamp on Tuesday, March 2nd.

HP on Data Center Efficiency. Last week Hewlett Packard announced a range of services for small to midsize data center operations that help improve efficiency, increase flexibility of IT budgets and ensure service-level commitments.  HP services aim to simplify the management of multivendor environments and maximize return on investment.  Ron Silliman, Gartner principal research analyst said “organizations should take a whole-environment approach to operational efficiency to reduce risk and drive better business outcomes.” ZDNet reported that HP will launch its Singapore research hub, focusing on data center architecture, cloud computing services and sustainable processes and practices. Prith Banerjee, director of HP labs said that the Singapore site will aim to “lower total cost of ownership by 75 percent in data centers and halve the carbon footprint.”  The lab will support cloud research at other HP Labs sites that will then funnel into Cirious, HP’s enterprise cloud software platform.

Intel IT’s network strategy. The Intel Open Port IT Community blog posted a video explaining the data center network strategy for IT at Intel.  Supporting an enourmous global network, key focus areas include network standardization and WAN optimization.  The video highlights connectivity from their 3-4 blade centers per cabinet directly cabled to a communication cabinet in the center of every row and then on to a communication room, connecting the data center to the Intel wide area network.  The data center in the video is 25,000 square feet and contains 18,000 servers.  This video runs 4 minutes, 11 seconds.

Original post:
Roundup: ReliaCloud, enStratus, HP, Intel

Popularity: 11% [?]

Who Are the Contenders for the Federal Cloud?

Posted by admin On March - 1 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Which players figure to benefit if the U.S. government’s looming data center consolidation shifts large numbers of federal applications from in-house data centers to cloud computing platforms? In recent weeks, key players in the government computing niche have been positioning their cloud offerings ahead of the announcement of the consolidation initiative. Here are the companies whose track record and cloud platforms have positioned them for leadership in this lucrative niche:

HP: The huge hardware and software giant designed and built a secure cloud computing platform for the Department of Defense. The cloud initiative, known as RACE (Rapid Access Computing Environment) is designed to reduce costs, consolidate applications and shorten delivery times for DoD computing projects. On Feb. 16 HP announced a Cloud Design Service to provide consulting services for organizations building large-scale hybrid cloud environments. The company’s EDS unit has been a leading systems integrator for government agencies, including DHS and the FDA.

IBM: Big Blue is an established player in the government IT arena, and is already building a cloud platform for the U.S. Air Force that is designed to be “capable of supporting defense and intelligence networks.”

CSC: Last June CSC announced Trusted Cloud Services, a cloud computing offering that will build on the company’s historic strength managing highly-secure data center infrastructure for government and enterprise clients. CSC is partnering with Terremark and Microsoft, among others, to support its offering.

Terremark: The colocation and managed hosting specialist has been among the early winners in the government cloud shift, hosting the Data.gov and USA.gov web sites on its cloud platform, while benefiting from CSC’s presence as the anchor tenant in its NAP of the Capital Region data fortress in Culpeper, Virginia.

Savvis: This managed hosting provider is currently hosting Apps.gov, an online storefront for cloud services and applications for federal agencies. It just reorganized its cloud offerings – which include IaaS, PaaS and SaaS services – under the Savvis Symphony brand.

Carpathia Hosting: This managed services provider has a strong base of federal customers, and has been expanding in Virginia with a new data center and its acquisition of ServerVault. Last week Carpathia said it would team with Citrix to offer cloud solutions for government agencies.

Amazon: The cloud computing market leader has launched a federal division and is partnering with partnering with Apptis, an experienced player in the government IT arena. The company is also building a new data center to expand its presence in northern Virginia.   

Microsoft: Last week Microsoft unveiled a new, dedicated government cloud as part of Microsoft Online Services. The company says its new Business Productivity Online Suite Federal offering is customized for the security, privacy and compliance needs of U.S. federal government agencies.

Google: Last September Google unveiled plans for a government cloud platform that will become operational in 2010. “Offering the same services and features as our existing commercial cloud (such as Google Apps), this dedicated environment within existing Google facilities in the US will serve the unique needs of US federal, state, and local governments,” the company said.

Original post:
Who Are the Contenders for the Federal Cloud?

Popularity: 12% [?]

Feds Commence Huge Data Center Consolidation

Posted by Blogger On March - 1 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Federal CIO Vivek Kundra tour the NASA Nebula cloud computing container last year. Kundra has announced plans for a major consolidation of 1,100 U.S. government data centers.

The federal government has begun what looms as the largest data center consolidation in history, hoping to dramatically reduce IT operations that are currently distributed among more than 1,100 data centers.

On Friday Federal CIO Vivek Kundra outlined details of the ambitious plan in a memo that directs federal agencies to prepare an inventory of the IT assets by April 30 and develop a preliminary data center consolidation plan by June 30. These plans will need to be finalized by Dec. 31, 2010, with implementation beginning in 2011.

Huge Implications for Data Center Sector
The government data center consolidation has huge implications for the fortunes of system integrators, data center service providers (especially in northern Virginia), and cloud computing platforms optimized for hosting government apps.

The consolidation effort figures to generate significant business for companies providing energy efficiency tools and consulting, as Kundra signaled that reducing energy costs will be a driving force in the effort. He noted that the number of government data centers soared from 432 in 1999 to the current 1,100 plus.

“This growth in redundant infrastructure investments is costly, inefficient and unsustainable and has a significant impact on energy consumption,” said Kundra. “In 2006 Federal servers and data centers consumed 6 billion kwH of electricity, and without a fundamental shift in how we deploy technology it could reach 12 billion kwH by 2012.”

First Assessment Due April 30
The immediate challenge: Federal agencies must conduct a “high-level assessment” of all their IT assessments and data centers by April 30, followed by a more detailed accounting by July 30.

In announcing the Federal Data Center Consolidation Initiative, Kundra outlined four high-level goals:

  • Promote the use of Green IT by reducing the overall energy and real estate footprint of government data centers;
  • Reduce the cost of data center hardware, software and operations;
  • Increase the overall IT security posture of the government;
  • Shift IT investments to more efficient computing platforms and technologies.

That last bullet point is boosting expectations that a meaningful chunk of government IT operations will be shifted to a cloud computing model. Kundra discussed this prospect at an appearance Friday, saying the federal government is looking for “game-changing approaches” to deal with the problematic growth in data centers rather than “brute force consolidation.”

“This is a huge opportunity to apply best practices from the private sector,” Kundra told Federal Computer Week. “It is a huge problem. The path we are on does not make sense.”

Likely to Boost Data Center Demand
But the cloud model won’t make sense for all federal applications. If recent consolidations by companies like HP and Intel are any indication, the drive for greater efficiency will render many of the current data center properties obsolete. Many older data facilities do not have the power capacity to support a highly-utilized equipment space. Consolidation also leads to higher densities, which are more difficult to cool in legacy facilities.

That means new data center space, most likely in northern Virginia and Maryland. Systems integrators and companies building cloud platforms have been among the players driving demand for data center space in northern Virginia, where demand has been strong and new supply has been limited. As the federal consolidation moves ahead, that demand is likely to increase as federal agencies identify new requirements.

The federal consolidation is also likely to be good news for server vendors, as consolidations usually include hardware refreshes to take advantage of the latest advances in computing power and energy efficiency.

Original post:
Feds Commence Huge Data Center Consolidation

Popularity: 1% [?]

Punked in the Data Center

Posted by Blogger On March - 1 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

How would you react if a visitor to your data center took out a pair of scissors and cut through an Ethernet cable? Even better: How would your company’s director of engineering react? The folks at Isilon Systems teamed with magician Scott Tokar to have some sport with Kiran Bhageshpur, Isilon’s director of engineering, who thinks he’s making a video promoting network attached storage. Watch this video for the drama and then check out the explanation of how the trick was executed. This video runs about 2 minutes, 20 seconds.

For additional video, check out our DCK video archive and the Data Center Videos channel on YouTube.

Original post:
Punked in the Data Center

Popularity: 1% [?]

Liquid Computing Winding Down

Posted by Blogger On March - 1 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Server vendor Liquid Computing is out of money and will wind down its business, the company’s chairman tells the Ottawa Citizen. The company historically specialized in the high performance computing market, but shifted its focus last year to try to sell to a broader market.

“We thought we were in position for a new round of funding but two of our three major investors were unable to contribute,” Liquid chairman Adam Chowaniec told the Citizen. “We have no alternative, but to start winding down the company to preserve as much of the intellectual property as possible.”

The paper reports that chief executive Vikram Desai has left the company and most of the staff at the company’s Ottawa headquarters were laid off last week. Chowaniec said the company hopes to sell its intellectual property assets.

Liquid Computing had raised about $50 million from investors provided include VG Partners (VenGrowth), Export Development Canada (EDC), and Business Development Bank of Canada (BDC).

Original post:
Liquid Computing Winding Down

Popularity: 1% [?]