Sun Plans to Have No In-House Data Centers by 2015 158
1sockchuck writes "Sun Microsystems wants to cut its IT department's data center footprint in half within five years, and then eliminate in-house data centers completely shortly afterward. 'Our goal is to reduce our entire data center presence by 2015,' writes Sun data center architect Brian Cinque, who says Sun hopes to shift its in-house IT to a software-as-a-service model. Sun will use virtualization and consolidation to reduce its data center space and energy usage by 50 percent by 2013, with a goal of moving it all online two years later. Sun's plan reflects the shift to utility computing discussed in Nicholas Carr's new book, which we debated earlier this week."
Eat your own dog food. (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Eat your own dog food. (Score:5, Insightful)
Man, if *Sun* can't afford to maintain a Solaris data center, then who can?
It isn't that Sun can't afford to. It's that it doesn't make sense. They are in the business of inventing stuff, not in the business of laying down cables, plugging in blades and pouring gas into backup generators. That's a very different set of competencies.
Re:Eat your own dog food. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Eat your own dog food. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Eat your own dog food. (Score:4, Insightful)
SINGLE POINT OF FAILURE (Score:2)
I keep reading all these comments about moving entire companies' worth of systems to a co-lo facility.
And, setting aside the question of reliability of the uplink [yes, Virgina, backhoes - not to mention tornadoes, hurricanes, and earthquakes - do take out fiber optic lines every now and then], and setting aside questions of privacy [do you really want God only knows whom to be able to sniff your company's email traffic?], then what about the fact that you're dealing with a single point of failure?
What
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Then you're an idiot for not setting up a backup at an independent facility. You'd be in the same situation if you ran it yourself, the only difference being the concentration of value making a centralized location more of a target, but also better able to afford to reduce that risk itself.
reducing that risk... (Score:2)
better able to afford to reduce that risk itself
Q: Tell me, in the six years since 9-11, and the twelve years since Oklahoma City, just what exactly has been done to prevent ol' Timothy Abdul Hussein McVeigh from driving an ammonia-fertilizer truck bomb to One "Bilshire Woulevard" and taking out the entire telecomm infrastructure for the southwestern United States?
A: Not a damned thing.
the concentration of value making a centralized location more of a target
Exactly - CONCENTRATION MAKES FOR A HIGHE
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So don't outsource your IT there. It's not like there's no competition for secure datacenters, and a number of places actually have increased their security. For people who are currently located in the southwestern US, you sound like an advertisement for outsourcing webserv
Metamorphosis of Prime Intellect "Failure" (Score:2)
http://www.kuro5hin.org/prime-intellect/ [kuro5hin.org]
Re:Eat your own dog food. (Score:5, Insightful)
Why?
I mean, I can see this with some other examples. But if you're a router vendor, there's no reason you shouldn't have a finely-tuned hummin'n'thrummin internal network: your product is all about that, the talent you need to hire to in order to produce those routers is going to have to know how, and it's a good opportunity to real-world test your products.
But then again, Oracle probably does have some employees using Excel as a database.
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Re:Eat your own dog food. (Score:5, Interesting)
In that way, they actually _are_ eating their own dog food. If they can use virtualization etc. etc. in their own company using their own hardware/software at some external datacenter, then they are an excellent showcase for their clients.
I think the confusion is caused by a bad formulation of the plan, the fact that I am actually trying to explain it here shows enough! I have the impression that Sun has the right ideas and the right technology, but terribly fails in bringing a convincing way that they have a economically viable strategy. They open sourced almost all their software assets recently, they started to OEM Solaris to Dell (how will that sell Sun hardware?), and it goes on. Many comments on JS's blog are from confused small investors that wonder how they will ever get to see any money coming back from their stocks. I understand Sun's problem, hardware has a either a low profit marge (Dell) or you need convincing ways to sell the expensive hardware Sun or IBM sells. Sun is trying in many many ways to find a revolutionary way to do this, but they seem to forget that in the end all you need is a talented, convincing salesman to get the hardware to the costumer.
Bottom line: your tech is ok, but get a PR and sales department that works, Sun!
Re:Eat your own dog food. (Score:5, Informative)
Sun has also been outsourcing many of their services for years, such as email. That is handled by an external company that uses Sun's servers and hardware to run and manage their services for them.
Sun also outsources a massive amount of technical support, engineering and developer resources from HCL in India.
For many years Sun has been pushing a "sun on sun" philosophy where everything at Sun that could possibly run Sun products should do so. There isn't much left to run since everything is being outsourced. Take a guess as to how long before Sun is just one building with a bunch of executives overseeing everything from middle management downward overseas and in outsourced domestic services.
Re:Eat your own dog food. (Score:5, Insightful)
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I smell Troll.
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When people have problems with an inept help desk in India, they tend to blame the language gap. But that's just a symptom. English is a standard language in India, and anybody who has a serious education can speak it well enough to communicate easily with a westerner. So if your Indian help desk pers
Eliminate data centers? (Score:4, Funny)
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The article is a bit weird, I think. (Score:2)
""Did I just say 0 data centers? Yes! Our goal is to reduce our entire data center presence by 2015," writes Brian, who says the goal will be to reduce data center square footage by 50 percent by 2013,
How is this news? Everyone in the world is doing the same thing.
More of what everyone is doing:
"The project consolidated 2,200 servers into 1,000 energy-efficient servers and reduced the number of storage devices from 73
Did they love their "JavaStations"? Mr. Coffee? (Score:3, Interesting)
From the Wikipedia article: "Production models comprised: * JavaStation-1 (part number JJ-xx), codenamed Mr. Coffee: based on a 110 MHz MicroSPARC IIe CPU,
Larry Ellison of Oracle started it: Larry Ellison and the Network Computer that Wasn't [mondaymemo.net]. (It was 13 years ago, not 8, as I said earlier.)
"Network Computers" were computers for other people, not the people who were talk
Still in business by 2015? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Still in business by 2015? (Score:4, Insightful)
Sun New Delhi will be going strong, I'm sure.
I don't get it (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm missing something here, so maybe somebody could make this more clear.
Re:I don't get it (Score:5, Insightful)
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There are actually many large companies that do not run data centers; however, seeing the cost they are willing pay for a completely hosted IT department, I do not think they are saving money or resources.
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Uh, yeah, boss... The vendor's working on that. I'll give 'em a call and see what's taking them so damn long....
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I guess I may be biased here as a sysadmin, but how do you propose a sysadmin's demand is going to diminish when all of the service
Re:I don't get it (Score:4, Insightful)
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For a small scale application you're right. I'm competant enough to set up a web server that will host an application so long as it doesn't end up under heavy load, at which point I'll hand the server admin off to somebody who knows how to keep a heavily loaded web serve
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We are using virtualization on some things - but mostly little stuff. I work with our primary production databases and we don't share those boxes. We are getting all we can out of them on our own. But I'm a dba - so in my opinion I never have eno
Yada yada yada... (Score:3, Interesting)
There are two approaches that corporations take to custom machinery (assembly lines for automated production). The first is that they get the machine builder to build and install the line. Then once the assembly line has been installed the local maintenance staff is trained to repair and manage the machines.
The second approach is that the compa
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That's a very dangerous statement.
A few hundred years ago, you'd have been thought mad for suggesting that one very small group of people could persuade a much larger group of people to trust them with all their money. Today we call this "banking".
Plenty of companies, small and large, outsource large chunks of the accounting needed to run their business to others. And that's another example of the same idea - trusting someone else with some of th
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SPECIALIZATION, SPECIALIZATION, SPECIALIZATION (Score:2)
I think the writing is on the wall that system administrators are going to go the way of the tv repairman.
I agree with you that certain aspects of today's IT infrastructure could be commoditized.
For instance, Hotmail, Yahoo!, and Google have long since proved that basic email functionality can be easily commoditized.
And Exchange Server backend [with Outlook frontend synchronization], while maybe an order of magnitude more difficult than basic email, could, in many cases, probably be commoditized [ass
Apparently you've lost your humanity somewhere. (Score:2)
I know this will probably get modded troll
Well, it'd be quite deserving of it, the way you're talking about change.
but I think many people need to face reality.
Maybe you're pushing something at the wrong pace, and perhaps in the wrong way. Don't be surprised if you get tons of resistance going the wrong way about it.
The world changes. Attitudes change. It's better to face it head on and be prepared than deny it and be jobless with no skills.
Then adapt the change to fit the needs and desires of those who are facing it. That's how change is accomplished, not by playing God and not making the transition smooth. That means taking care of your own first, then moving as needed. It may be slower, but it certainly keeps p
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I call bullshit. I'm an experienced UNIX system administrator (worked on big Sun kit for over 12 years at large telcos and banks), and I have yet to hear of any UNIX administrator in India that knows how to work on large, enterprise servers like Sun Fire 25Ks. Sure, you can outsource the small help-desk and first-tier support, but try finding someone that knows how to properly architect multi-gigabit
Google Apps. (Score:2)
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Reduction of in-house reliance nothing new (Score:2, Funny)
- RG>
No In-House Data Centers? (Score:1)
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Still, the whole model is predicated on networking technology becoming so efficient th
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It also implies they'll be completely out of the software business by then.
Why? What is the relationship between outsourcing their own application hosting and being out of the business of selling software. There is no correspondence.
It only makes sense if they're planning to totally reinvent themselves along the way. Personally, if I were at Sun and thought SaaS was going to be the model of the future, I'd be making moves to ensure that other companies would be getting their services from me, not dis
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The computers will be in someone's house, just not Sun's. This just means that Sun will be completely out of the hardware business by then.
Why? What does one have to do with the other? Of course the computers will be "somewhere." That's what "no in-house" XXX means. "No in-house catering" does not imply the non-existence of food elsewhere!
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OK, but I don't think that's what's happening with Sun. The whole premise of "software as a service" is that the customer (i.e. Sun) has no control over what hardware is used. It's the complete commoditization of hardware (i.e. just like sugar, oil, etc.). If Sun is acknowledging that hardware is a commodity, they're also acknowledging that no one is going to pay a premium to use their har
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There will still be a need for big honkin' servers in data centers...but data centers are very expensive to run. may as well farm it out to someone who specializes in it, and just buy service/disk space from that company.
(I'd imagine that they would have a certain basis for buying that service from a company that runs on all Sun gear.)
2015? (Score:5, Insightful)
Sure thing, no problemo ... (Score:2)
Yes, well
U will be assimilated (Score:2)
Sirius Cybernetics Corporation (Score:4, Insightful)
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Uh it's called outsourcing (Score:2)
No machines (Score:5, Funny)
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Didn't make sense? Must be Sun marketing. . . (Score:2)
More snarky Sun spin (Score:4, Insightful)
Clever spin. See how they made everyone turn their heads and take a curious interest? How much better was that than announcing "by 2015 we're going to fire all our IT staff and farm out the data center ops to some third party" ??
I can top that.... (Score:2)
Another bone head decision by management. (Score:1, Interesting)
Already various parts of the internal network and infrastructure are outsourced and guess what? We, the people who need to develop and be on the bleeding edge get forgotten AND screwed over.
We get forgotten because the percentage of people who need to be able to use IPv6 and anything other than plain I
What are the negatives? (Score:1)
But in the end, all this may result in increased server/hardware prices.
Think about it, mass production of low end servers what reduced the cost of server hardware.
If everyone used utility computing, that might mean less hardware needed and produced which makes it cost more to produce.
No in-house data centres (Score:1)
Fat chance. (Score:5, Insightful)
Sun will use buzzwords to reduce its data center space and perceived energy usage by 50 percent by 2013, with a goal of moving it all to India two years later.
There, fixed that for Sun.
First, I would like to point out that providing anything over the internet requires that servers somewhere invariably consume electricity at that somewhere, so relinquishing web services to the cloud does not amount to a smaller overall energy consumption, it just eliminates the evident level of corporate consumption. Granted, they have migrated to more energy efficient equipment thus far, but that does not amount to a hill of soybeans because newer equipment is nearly always more efficient. Top marks for obfuscation.
The proverbial cloud seems more efficient because it consumes precious unused cycles (we recently discussed [slashdot.org] the value of these), but it could be argued that it: (a) artificially inflates perceived demand for traffic provision over certain ~tubes~ to the computing source, increasing necessary power supply for those paths, (b) increases power consumption incrementally at the point of the processing computer, and (c) via the law of diminishing returns, increases overall resource consumption thanks to the resource cost of transporting the information to less efficient equipment. The processing requirement is not diminished, only distributed and increased through that distribution. How many hops through these abominable "25-50% efficient" data centers before the relatively minuscule reduction in Sun's data centers is met? And what of the jobs lost? And what of the increased commute consumption of unemployed coders and hardware wonks to their stately new stations behind Burger King grills?
We now employ both centralized systems and massively distributed systems to host information we demand, and generally these are selected based on monetary capital versus willingness or incentive to participate, overall robustness being fairly equal. SETI and many other number-crunching projects rely on the generous support of willing software installers to participate in their projects, but if an already stable bandwidth-consuming entity is forced on nearly all consumers of a basic internet need (and their hosts), I think their piece of the system will collapse because the participants will not be so willing! The internet changes rapidly, as many players swiftly respond to changing conditions. We generally have a state of equilibrium, except where governmental players attempt rule changes. When a commercial entity (Microsoft, etc) prods around rule changes, we make major waves. If Sun chooses to put their whole school of thought into this particular sea, I think they'll have plenty of sharks to worry about.
Sun would like to cut the monetary cost of operating data centers, and their chosen method to shove it down our throats is to first douse it with the chocolate syrup of environmentalism. How insulting; do they really think we're that stupid? A forced migration to a new system is pretty retarded in itself, and the trifecta of security concerns, implementation nightmares, and environmental balderdash seems to be suicidal.
Protracting a bit, as a forced (college student) user of Sun products, I would be absolutely resistant to any such environmentally shrouded money grab, preferring the security and stability of normal centralized (particularly open source, mind you) not-for and for-profit entities. I would be very favorable to future competitors of Sun that oppose these vulnerabilities. Finally, I would like to clearly state that I believe this this to be a mere political statement to justify already existent a
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I understand the points and being an "offshore datacenter" is bad for local US economy, however, I would add something to think before slamming
SUN is a company, and if it does not make profits for long enough it will disappear
Some seems interested on the demise of SUN, I do not believe products like Eclipse have that name by chance, C# struggle to declare itself "not like Java", professor says that Java is harmful to students, I am sure I can continue
SUN gives to the community (they pay, you get the bene
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Nicely reasoned, but please allow me to synopsise it a bit further.
We can get it elsewhere more reliably, efficiently and for less money, because people in the cloud are:
It may not be phrased in quite that manner in the boardroom.
I mis-read this phrase: (Score:2)
Wouldn't it be the ultimate in outsourcing if HR functions were outsourced to an overseas company specializing in outsourcing other resources.
Maybe I should set up an overseas HR shop.
secret SaaS (Score:4, Interesting)
There turned out to be no third parties who wanted that. What is Sun's answer? Do the exact opposite.
That's right! Sun is going to buy computing time from other people. Their HQ is going to be like a giant Net PC or something. It'll be frickin awesome! And just as profitable as the last initiative was money-losing.
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What is replacing the in-house data centers (Score:3, Funny)
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Just beware of brownouts.
Smoke screen? (Score:1)
Seriously though people, do you think the corporate CXOs are really doing hardcore cost-benefit analysis when planning strategic moves like this? As long as the balance spreadsheet ends up looking good, it's all fashion. When outsourcing is in fashion, everybody do so, when utility computing is the fashion, same happens. It's about what the stock holders expect you to do (especially when competitors are doing something new).
not surprising (Score:2)
No need for datacentres? (Score:2)
Sun probably won't have any datacentres of their own, but they have been moving away from that for a very long time. In the UK they rent space from AT&T for small projects, and the capital projects where they partner with BT are hosted in BT-owned centres. In the meantime their offices like the UK HQ are empty.
Virtualisation and utility computing are buzzwords in the business, and a lot of companies are going for the virtualisation aspect, which m
Where is the best place for a datacenter? (Score:4, Interesting)
So there is presumably a lot of mileage in building secure data center facilities near large water flows, rather than in, say, somewhere like Phoenix where lots of power is needed to remove the heat. Much easier to outsource the datacenter than to relocate the company. Perhaps we should conclude that someone at Sun has seen where power costs are going and got a clue.
Rolls-Royce builds what are possibly the best generators in the world, but they don't use them to run their plant. Someone else buys and operates them and, guess what, they buy electricity back from a variety of sources. There seems, on the face of it, no reason why Sun should not do the same with compute capacity.
It's ridiculous (Score:2)
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If Sun were to disappear by 2009 then they would have succeeded in eliminating all of their in-house datacenters. In fact they will have finished 6 years ahead of schedule. How great will that look on their resumes?
Sun datacenters contracted to EDS 15 years ago (Score:2)
EDS handles sun datacenters all over the world. Moving offshore is nothing new for Sun/EDS, they have been doing it for years. So the physical machines will be hosted somewhere else? Meh.
Data Center Business (Score:2)
Sun is onto something (Score:2)
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That's kind of crappy. If you don't "eat your dog food" as a HARDWARE and OS company, who can take you seriously? If you aren't running your own stuff, you're loosing the BEST opportunity to improve your product!!! If you run your product in production, then you can make your CUSTOMER experience better... something all these people forget. Nothing beats dealing with a company that can take a day and REPEAT your problem
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This is IT, SHOW ME you know your stuff... don't sell it to me... that's the WRONG direction, anybody can SELL software and Chinese made hardware... it's can YOU build solutio
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Re:Sun does... (Score:5, Funny)
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