Thursday, March 11, 2010

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Carpathia, Citrix Launch Cloud Partnership

Posted by Blogger On February - 26 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Earlier this week managed hosting provider Carpathia Hosting announced that it would partner with Citrix Systems to offer public and private cloud solutions for businesses and government agencies. Carpathia has built its InstantOn cloud service atop Citrix XenServer technology, and its using Citrix virtualization and networking technology more extensively in the company’s 12 data centers. In this video, Carpathia CTO Jon Greaves and Simon Crosby, CTO of the Citrix Datacenter and Cloud division, discuss the new partnership. For more information on the Carpathia/Citrix offering, see the related videos Flex Tenancy: Secure Multi-Tenant Network Environments and 2010: Year of the Cloud. This video runs about 2 minutes.

For more news about cloud computing, see our Cloud Computing Channel. For additional video, check out our DCK video archive and the Data Center Videos channel on YouTube.

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Carpathia, Citrix Launch Cloud Partnership

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Retiring A Data Center. With an Axe.

Posted by admin On February - 26 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Dean Nelson of eBay uses an axe to retire the final server as the company powers down its oldest data center.

The data center is built around the principle of perpetual uptime. The power must always be on. The data must always be available. Yet what becomes of these facilities when they reach the end of their usefulness? What procedures and rituals are required when a data center is turned off?

At eBay, it involves putting an an axe through the final server. That’s the fun part of a great blog post by Dean Nelson, senior director of the data center team at eBay, which last month shut down the company’s oldest data center in Sacramento. The facility was retired as part of a major data center consolidation for the giant Internet auction site, which will shift much of its operations to a new data center in Utah. Dean describes the process, gives some history on the facility, and shares details of the ceremony for de-activating the final server and powering down the building.

Dean writes:

“After some final words were spoken by Paul, Bala (the project lead), myself and even Olivier Sanche, my predecessor who kept this crazy thing going before I arrived, we got down to the business of truly putting this data center to rest. After 8 years of serving as a core to eBay’s complex portfolio of data centers, all of the 3400 assets had found a new home, except one…and it was not going to get off easy. This old x335 was sitting timidly in the last rack left on the floor, waiting for its time to go, not knowing that we had something else planned for it. So much time, effort, collaboration, planning and precise execution had been put in to bring this facility to a close, but one more action was needed to officially signify the death of this data center. And with that…WHAP! I reared back and drove an axe through the final remnant of this once complex, powerful and archaic beast of a data center. A symbolic, but appropriate end to the life of this aging server…and its home… (don’t worry the asset was recycled.)

Bala Meduri, who oversaw the closure process for the facility for eBay, then turned off the power. Thanks to Dean and the eBay team for an inside look at the terminal moment for a data center.See the full story and photos at Data Center Pulse.

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Retiring A Data Center. With an Axe.

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Emerson Data Center Earns LEED Gold Rating

Posted by admin On February - 25 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Emerson Network Power has installed this 7,800 square foot solar array on the roof of its new St. Louis data center.

Emerson’s new data center in St. Louis has earned Gold certification under the LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) program for energy-efficient buildings, the company said today. The 35,000-square-foot facility sports the state of Missouri’s largest solar power installation – a 7,800-square-foot rooftop array of more than 550 solar panels that can supply up to 100 kilowatts of power.

Emerson earned 40 out of a possible 51 points to receive LEED Gold certification.the U.S. Green Building Council. The company invested $50 million in the facility, which also features a high-voltage power distribution system using 240 volt power instead of 208 volt, uses Liebert XD high-density overhead cooling units,and follows Emerson’s Energy Logic guidelines throughout its design.

“The LEED Gold certification – a rare designation for a data center – is a significant validation of Emerson’s commitment to energy efficiency and environmental responsibility,” said Emerson Chairman, CEO and President David Farr. “The certification recognizes Emerson’s innovative approach and efficient technologies for managing one of the most vexing problems facing data center managers – energy consumption.”

The new data center is part of a broader consolidation in which the company will shift workloads from 100 sites into just four data centers.

More than 80 percent of the construction waste generated was diverted from landfills through recycling, and innovative design features enabled Emerson to save more than 2.5 miles of copper piping, minimizing the use of excess materials. St. Louis-based Fox Architects partnered with Emerson on the design of the data center and managed the company’s application for the LEED Gold designation.

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Emerson Data Center Earns LEED Gold Rating

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Inside Herakles’ Sacramento Data Center

Posted by admin On February - 25 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Herakles Data Center has been providing data center services in the Sacramento, Calif. market since 2001. This presentation provides an overview of the company’s 90,000 square foot data center facility and commentary on the company’s culture from CEO Lou Kirchner. This video runs about 3 minutes, 45 seconds.

Check out our Sacramento Channel for more stories about the Sacramento data center market. For additional video, check out our DCK video archive and the Data Center Videos channel on YouTube.

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Inside Herakles’ Sacramento Data Center

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San Diego Colo Firm Castle Access Gets Funding

Posted by Blogger On February - 25 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

San Diego colocation and managed hosting provider Castle Access said Wednesday that it expcts to make additional investments in data center infrastructure and services after securing “multi-million dollar” equity financing. The company said additional details of the investment will be provided within the next 60 days. Piper Jaffray & Co. served as financial advisor to Castle Access on the transaction.

“As we look at growth in 2010 and beyond, we believe accelerating our opportunities in the data center and IT managed services is key to addressing our customers’ needs in the market,” said Mark Hopperton, CEO of Castle Access. “We look forward to increasing our data center footprint and providing innovative technology and solutions that bring value to our clients.”

Castle Access offers colocation, managed services and a flexible suite of data center options accommodating all types of colocation requirements. The company operates two data centers in the San Diego market.

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San Diego Colo Firm Castle Access Gets Funding

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Earnings Roundup: iWeb, The Planet, Rackspace

Posted by Blogger On February - 25 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Here’s a roundup of quarterly financial results announcements:

iWeb Group first quarter 2010. Canadian provider of Internet hosting services and IT infrastructure  iWeb Group announced first quarter 2010 financial results Monday. Revenues increased to $7.2 million, an adjusted EBITDA of $2.1 million was recorded and net income increased to $180,000 compared to the $1,248,000 loss reported a year ago. iWeb announced their fourth data center last month and increased server capacity by 20,000. iWeb’s shares are listed on the TSX Venture Exchange (TSX-V: IWB).

The Planet reports fourth quarter results. Hosting provider The Planet discussed its results for the quarter ending December 31, 2009.  “We ended the fourth quarter and the year with increased revenue and EBITDA beyond 30 percent, despite the tough economic conditions,” said Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Douglas Erwin. The Planet said deal sizes continue to increase, with the company’s complex infrastructure solutions experiencing year-over-year growth of better than 30 percent. Investment plans for 2010 include customer-facing systems, their network and the Virtual Dedicated Server offering as well as data center infrastructure.

Rackspace fourth quarter and year-end 2009 results. Rackspace (RAX) announced financial results for the quarter and year ending December 31, 2009.  Highlights include net revenue of $169.5 million, adjusted EBITDA of $56 million and net income of $9 million. Managed hosting revenue for the quarter increased to $152.4 million and cloud revenue increased to $17.1 million.  Total server count and customer count grew in the fourth quarter at 56,671 servers and 90,925 customers. “In 2010, we plan to boost enterprise sales, continue to gain traction in the cloud, improve our SMB offering and mine our installed base for growth opportunities,” said president and CEO Lanham Napier.

Global Crossing fourth quarter and 2009 results. Global Crossing (GLBC) announced unaudited fourth quarter and full-year 2009 results. Highlights include revenue of $2.54 billion and 2009 free cash flow increasing to $82 million, an improvement of $71 million year over year.  Wholesale voice revenue declined 12%, or $50 million, year over year to $374 million. Fourth quarter revenues were $651 million, with $93 million generated from wholesale voice services.  “We expect to grow again in 2010, fueled by investments in our products, network and sales force,” said Global Crossing CEO John Legere. “We will continue to make investments for growth, as we did in 2009, using internally-generated cash from operations while delivering another year of positive Free Cash Flow in 2010.”

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Earnings Roundup: iWeb, The Planet, Rackspace

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CA Acquires 3Tera in Cloud Management Play

Posted by Blogger On February - 24 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

3Tera, whose software helps companies deploy and manage cloud computing infrastructure, has been acquired by software giant CA, the companies announced today. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

“The significance of this acquisition is a heck of a lot more than just a land grab in a hot space,” said 3Tera CEO Barry X Lynn. “We are confident that as a team, CA and 3Tera, will extend our leadership of the cloud computing platform market. “We had many options for the future and this is the one that excited us the most.”

3Tera doesn’t host its own cloud platform, but licenses its AppLogic software to hosting companies to build virtual private data centers that can power cloud applications. The company’s software is used by service providers like BT, KDDI and Layered Technologies. 3Tera has more than 80 customers.

The deal “has the possibility of shaking up the admittedly stodgy image of CA – and what CA can deliver for customers thinking about cloud computing,” writes CA’s Jay Fry, who joined the company in an earlier acquisition of Cassatt. “The 3Tera deal is certainly a very public acknowledgement by CA that cloud computing is front and center to what’s changing in IT. And, the deal drops another piece into place in a rapidly filling-out strategy by CA to address those changes.”

3Tera’s positioning of AppLogic tracks the evolution of recent industry trends. AppLogic began life as a “grid operating system” and was later presented as a tool for building virtual private data centers and is now described as a cloud computing platform. In a blog post, 3Tera’s Lynn acknowledged chatter about a “cloud bubble” but said the CA deal is grounded in the real-world need to manage infrastructure.

“CA is a management company,” wrote Lynn. “Their mission has always been and remains centered on the management of information technology. Their ability to adapt and manage each generation of technology has enabled them to thrive through all of these shifts. While there are several management vendors out there, we see most figuring out how to shoehorn customers’ needs into what they already have.”

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CA Acquires 3Tera in Cloud Management Play

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Roundup: Hibernia, Telx, Lexent, VeriSign

Posted by Blogger On February - 24 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

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

Switch & Data adds Hibernia Financial Network. Switch and Data (SDXC) announced that Hibernia Atlantic’s Global Financial Network (GFN) has become part of their GeoReach Program in North Bergen, New Jersey.  Built for the demanding requirements of the financial community Hibernia’s GFN provides a global fiber network dedicated to capital markets across the U.S., Canada, Europe and the Pacific Rim.  “As a part of Switch and Data’s GeoReach Program, we will be able to provide further connectivity throughout North America and Europe from Switch and Data’s New York EcoCenter in North Bergen,” said Joe Hilt, Vice President of Sales, North America for Hibernia Atlantic GFN.  GeoReach participants have engineered optimum paths from Switch and Data’s Financial EcoCenters to each of the regional liquidity providers to satisfy the requirements of the most latency-sensitive infrastructures.  In November 2009 Equinix announced that Hibernia Atlantic was expanding its GFN into the Equinix New York-2 and New York-4 data centers in New Jersey.  Switch and Data announced fourth quarter and full year 2009 financial results last week and confirmed that the Equinix merger is expected to close in the second quarter of 2010.

Telx announces Lexent fiber expansion. Colocation provider Telx announced that Lexent Metro Connect, a leading provider of dark fiber networks in the New York Metropolitan area, has expanded its presence to meet the continued growth of its client base colocating within Telx facilities.  “The Telx interconnection facilities at 60 Hudson St., a major telecommunications hub in New York, and 300 Boulevard East, a carrier-rich connectivity hub for the financial industry, are important to our growing client base,” said Ray La Chance, President of Lexent Metro Connect.  Lexent has an extensive base of enterprise and wholesale clients in the financial trading houses and the Telx expansion will provide both diversity and added capacity to their clients.

Verisign: 192 million domain registrations. In its latest Domain Name Industry Brief, Verisign (VRSN) reported that 2009 was closed with a base of more than 192 million domain name registrations across all of the Top Level Domain Names (TLDs), an increase of nearly 15 million domain name registrations since the close of 2008.  Overall 96.7 million domain names were registered for .com and .net. Verisign’s average daily DNS query load during the fourth quarter was 52 billion per day with peaks as high as 61 billion per day. Copies of the Domain Name Industry Brief can be obtained here.

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Roundup: Hibernia, Telx, Lexent, VeriSign

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Selling Hosting in a Sophisticated Market

Posted by admin On February - 24 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

James MacDougall is a sales leader who has sold hosting strategically and managed hosting sales teams throughout the United States for more than a decade. His leadership, both in the US military as well as corporate America, has resulted in numerous awards for both himself and his teams.

JAMES MacDOUGALL

No part of a hosting organization is unimportant. Indeed, many functions are independently critical and all are required for a complete and balanced service: Legal, Marketing, Product, Administration, Contracts and Finance, to name only some. But if Operations may be considered the head, then Sales is the heart. And it’s this central, systemic function – Sales – that so many organizations misunderstand to their detriment, and their customers as well. They get it grossly wrong and strangely (given its importance), many don’t even know why.

Hosting technology is evolving, but its sales methodologies have not kept pace with the industry’s sophistication. To be sure, blades, cloud, virtualization, SaaS and exotic managed services are today’s hosting du jour. Tomorrow they will undoubtedly look a bit different.

But what has changed in the way these are sold? Unfortunately, not much. Today’s sales teams need more than an appreciation of technological data center capabilities and how these affect customers, or even an understanding of the holy grail – i.e., the customer’s business model and buying criteria. Paradoxically, selling is not about selling. And equally ironic is that selling Hosting services is not about Hosting services.

Selling anything – but especially something as critical as hosting - simply boils down to helping the other guy through thick and thin, hand-in-glove, without complaint and for the duration of the relationship, not just until the contract ink dries.

If that concept is lost, then the result is typically what we see in the status quo of most sales organizations: Watery short-term funnel development lacking substance, unproductive or near-sighted opportunity pursuits chasing the latest shiny object, transactional commodification, and reliance on winning deals based primarily on a canned proposal over which the sales rep has little-to-zero control. The rep has no control because these offerings are substantially based on organizationally directed price and pre-existing data center operational capabilities, both of which are market driven (meaning you’re likely not appreciably different than the next provider) and you’re perceived as homogenous because all you’ve offered is the already assumed basic price of admission to bid.

There’s no service confidence exuded in such dealings and these aren’t differentiators. Every competitor does at least that. And those who think these are valuable differentiators are kidding themselves into failed ROI, unemployment, and doing their prospective customers a huge disservice by wasting everyone’s time.

Selling as a Lifestyle
Today’s hosting customers – yes, even “plain” colocation customers – are incredibly intelligent and they expect more. And frankly, given the complexity of what they’re doing and the options available to them, they need more. Accommodating this need is what I call Lifestyle Selling.

Lifestyle Selling is not selling to the rich and famous, or about achieving a certain status. Rather, it’s always selling; no matter where; no matter when. To be sure, it’s selling with zeal. But at its core it is selling with a servant’s heart. Lifestyle Selling is done because you believe it and it is the 24/7 fiber of your being. It’s not what you do as much as it is who you are.

Most hosting sales teams don’t implement Lifestyle Selling because they can’t. It’s not who they are, and the effort to become so is too difficult. Savvy customers know if you’re real; if you authentically care; if you are about them beyond yourself.

But if you demonstrate these qualities (which are rare and most probably absent in your competitors), then you have a resilient relationship that goes beyond the written contract; beyond the technology and SOW delivered; and even beyond the dreaded outage. And for those few who may still be myopically focused on money as the end goal, assuming the rest of the organization’s body parts are healthy, then Yes, you have an all but guaranteed future revenue stream because the lifestyle seller’s customers are not going anywhere and prospects are lining up.

Failure is Inevitable
Here’s an axiom that is no surprise: Technology will break and humans will fail. These are 100% guaranteed and unfortunately, they are also the two pillars on which data centers stand. The hosting organization that remains tall when these pillars sway are the ones who respond swiftly and correctly. Get it fixed, minimize damage, mitigate recurrence, and make it right.

It’s this last part – making it right – where Sales performs. The sales team who embraces Lifestyle Selling has prepared for the axiom’s reality because the sale has never ended. Hard times experienced by outages or billing issues are softened by the pre-existing and ongoing relationship germinated and cultivated by Sales. And the recurring revenue is protected since the lifestyle seller is deeper into the customer beyond the one or two contacts who inevitably leave their organization.

Never mind that the contract term will eventually end and a renewal will become necessary. The Lifestyle Selling sales team is ahead of the paperwork and has never ceased mutually collaborating with the customer at multiple levels. Never. For Lifestyle Selling teams, problem solving is far less painful and contract renewals are usually no-brainers. The Lifestyle Selling team not only generates revenue, but they protect it, as well.

Theory vs. Practice
I’d be surprised if any of these concepts are new to you, the reader. In theory it’s easy to buy into them, but in practice I know they’re hard because few sales teams actually operate this way. Even so-called strategic ones compromise and succumb to transactionalizing, too often yielding to burnout, low margins and turnover. Indeed, selling well requires tenacity, market and competitor awareness, and a slew of other traits comprising professionalism.

But the Lifestyle Selling team ultimately wins because it delivers beyond the norm and at a level deeply required by the customer. That’s not only hard, it’s scary since customers don’t care about your sales cycle and the end result (signature) is not always in hand nearing the last day of the month.

Beyond common know-how, Lifestyle Selling takes commitment, maturity and selflessness. It’s the difference between chasing what’s important vs. what’s urgent. In this fast-paced, what-have-you-done-for-me-lately hosting world, few sales professionals have the patience, courage and humility to actually serve to the level of customers’ needs. The objective math does not add up, but the principle is nevertheless true: Chasing and delivering on the important often solves for the urgent. Giving of oneself, as an individual and within a sales team, is what hosting customers need. It’s also what’s necessary to be a revenue leader.

No one reading (or writing) this is naive enough to think that businesses aren’t in the business of generating lots of money – even NPO’s. But the way to get there is not through undisciplined funnels, contracts and product. Rather, it’s through meaningful, long-term relationships consistently and tirelessly executed with delivery that pays off time and time again. That is value. And that is sales. Or more pointedly, it’s at least how hosting sales should be. Just ask a customer.

Industry Perspectives is a new content channel at Data Center Knowledge highlighting thought leadership in the data center arena. See our guidelines and submission process for information on participating in Industry Perspectives.

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Selling Hosting in a Sophisticated Market

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The iPad As A Colocation Platform?

Posted by Blogger On February - 24 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

The iPadColo.net web site. Is the Apple tablet really a colocation platform?

Is the iPad the hot new player in the colocation game? The hype and hope surrounding the new tablet PC from Apple is already so high that the appearance of iPadColo.net attracted attention yesterday. The site offers the iPad as a dedicated server, housed in a “world class data center” with up to 64GB of data and, perhaps most importantly, the ability to be the “envy of your friends.”

The answer to your question, of course, is “No this is not a real site.” It’s a clever bit of viral marketing from MacMiniColo, a Las Vegas colocation company, has been hosting Mac minis since their introduction in January 2005. MacMinicolo houses its servers in a Switch Communications data center. The deception is revealed when visitors reach the iPadColo.net signup page. “You weren’t really going to sign up were you?” it asks. “We think outside of the box here at Macminicolo, but we’re not that crazy.”

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The iPad As A Colocation Platform?

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