AmyO's Blog
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Wednesday May 27, 2009
Smiling Communities
CommunityOne

Next Monday we are sponsoring our CommunityOne West event, where developers, technologists and students come together to share experiences about open platforms, tools and services. The day is stuffed with over 70 technical sessions, over 40 lightning talks and some hands-on labs. Cloud, web, social media, mobile, operating systems and platforms, and more. And after all that, there are some rocking parties in the evening to light up everyone's smiles - like the one last year where I tried hitting a piñata blindfolded.

But an event does not make a community - Monday is not the beginning or the end of this technical community. CommunityOne simply provides a time and place for community members to meet and strengthen the work they do together all year round. The work that goes on in community forums on-line (like Sun Developer Network), in local events (like Sun Tech Days), and in the many blogs, tweets, skype-facilitated meetings, and so on and so on, round-the-world, round-the-clock, year-in and year-out.

This past weekend I had the privilege to join a different community at their annual event: the AngelRide. Where over 400 riders and volunteers come together with a common goal: to fund a hospital outreach program that brings joy into the lives of children with cancer. The outreach program is an extension of the Hole in The Wall Gang Camps - a wonderful set of camps around the country for youngsters with cancer to have some fun, to find some peace, and to feed the spirit they need to face their cancer battles. What I found this weekend was a strong, loving, and dedicated community of people who work year round to ensure the AngelRide logistics are seamless, to offer a web site and pictures community members can use to communicate their mission, to sweat and train hard so that the 135 miles of Connecticut hills don't look so impossibly daunting, to deliver to the ultimate goal - raising the most money to makes the kids lives easier.

While this past weekend's AngelRide was a beautiful event, the true beauty could be found in the smiles on the Angel rider's and volunteer's faces... Because the community once again raised funds for an outreach program that puts smiles on kids faces... And that's over 14000 kids the AngelRide has smiled upon so far.
Smiles All AroundFred!Smiling Volunteers

Posted at 09:03PM May 27, 2009 by Amy O'Connor in Open Source  |  Comments[0]

Friday Nov 21, 2008
Analyze this!
SAS 20 Nov 2008

Yesterday I participated in the Sun Analyst Series (SAS) with Peter Ryan (Sun's EVP of Global Sales and Services), Ingrid Van Den Hoogen (Sun's Senior Vice President of Corporate Marketing) and Dave Douglas (Senior V.P. of Network.com and now leading Cloud Computing and Developer Programs, and Sun's Chief Sustainability Officer - I really believe he has the longest title at Sun).

It was a good day. We talked with industry analysts about Sun's strategy for growth (software infrastructure, HPC, enterprise virtualization and consolidation, developer community growth and cloud computing), our new business groups (System Platforms, Application Platform Software, and Cloud Computing & Developer Platforms), and changes within marketing (product and technology marketing are now fully embedded directly into the product groups). Ingrid outlined the changes at Sun and how they'll help us moving forward. Peter talked about how Sun's innovations continue to set us apart (and ahead) of other companies. Dave gave a glimpse of cloud computing at Sun and I spoke about all the great things we do in Sun Services - oh, can I mention again that we have a great remote operations management business? As I said, it was a good day. We had a lot of good conversations. Answered a lot of good questions.

It was an even better dinner. You have to analyze the analysts a bit too - our crew at dinner was really interesting. We swapped stories all around and had a great time. The overall mode was really positive. If only the economy would agree.
Posted at 09:08PM Nov 21, 2008 by Amy O'Connor in Sun  |  Comments[0]

Monday Nov 10, 2008
Disruptive Open Storage

Today at Sun we're all bouncing off the walls because today Sun launches the Sun Storage 7000 Unified Storage Series (code name "Amber Road"), the world's first open storage appliances. Words like "disruptive", "revolutionary", "transformative" and "radical" have been used to describe the new Sun Storage 7110, 7210, and 7410 Unified Storage Systems. Deserved or hype? I can think of three things off the bat that argue for deserved:

ZFS Hybrid Pool An Open Architecture means open data formats, open protocols, reusable components, integrated products, open source software and a crucial feedback loop with our open storage community. There's no additional licensing or enabling of software features. We put the smarts in our open source software (like ZFS, DTrace, FMA, SMF) so our customers can use lower-cost, general purpose systems.

ZFS Hybrid Storage Pools are storage stacks made from a mix of DRAM, Flash/SSD and SATA. ZFS manages this storage hierarchy as one transparent pool optimizing it to leverage the best attributes of each device. This optimization means the best performance (at about 25% the cost of traditional storage) and best energy-efficiency possible. ZFS's optimizations yields a 3.2 times faster Read IOPS, 11% faster Write IOPS and a 2 times faster raw capacity. ZFS not only optimizes for speed it also constantly runs data integrity checks to prevent any data corruption. It's not only fast, it's good.

Storage Analytics The 7000 Class Systems has a browser user interface (BUI) that radically simplifies administration tasks like configuration, maintenance (including hardware), checking shares (the 7000 line exports files systems as shares) and status (current usage of CPU, memory, storage, network, services, hardware, CIFS, NDMP, NFSv3 and v4, and iSCSI - it's pretty comprehensive and all on one page!) and, most wonderfully, DTrace analytics. In the storage world robust analytics on workloads in production just haven't existed. Now an administrator is able to look at a problem in real time - all while systems continue running in production. The Storage Analytics uses a drill-down analysis - checking the higher level statistics first and then going into finer detail based on previous findings. So, for example, things are moving along smoothly and suddenly performance is bad. With the Storage Analytics you can now ask: How many IOPS is the system doing? Which clients are causing a spike in IOPS? Let's say it's a CIFS protocol causing the problem; from that data point you'll then drill down and ask, Which Windows Client is going crazy? Is it doing more reads or writes? Which file is it reading or writing to? Before you would have been stopped at the second question. Now life is good. An administrator can quickly identify and diagnose system performance issues, and debug storage and network problems. Find it quick and fix it quick without shutting anything down. Pretty amazing. So far ahead of anything else available, you might even call it disruptive. :->

stat dashboard

Sun doesn't stop at great open architecture, open storage appliances, revolutionary features like ZFS Hybrid Storage Pools, and get-it-no-where-else Storage Analytics. Sun follows up the 7000 class systems with great services. Our Professional Services is ready to help your storage migration with our Sun Unified Storage Data Migration Service. Sun's experts will migrate your storage systems quickly and securely saving you time and bringing you the full benefits of all the 7000 series features.

Posted at 02:57PM Nov 10, 2008 by Amy O'Connor in Sun  |  Comments[0]

Friday Nov 07, 2008
Of Classic Cars and Vintage Support
Classic Yellow Mini AmyO Behind the WheelClassic Green Mini

In a way that surprises me, I love my Mini Cooper. I've become a car enthusiast as I never imagined possible. My attachment to my car borders on the downright giddy. I love all things Mini Cooper and even went to a Mini Driving Academy. I'm fairly new to Mini Mania but I've seen my future in Classic Mini owners. At Mini Meet-ups the classic owners talk a lot about maintenance - where to get classic engine parts, where the best, most knowledgeable mechanics can be found, who to trust with your paint job.

At Sun we have a classic community too - our Solaris 8 users. They like what they have and want to stay at that rev. Our classic community doesn't need to worry about maintenance or search for experts; Sun Services provides them Solaris 8 Vintage Patch Service. Vintage Patch Service can take two forms: straight-up Solaris 8 environment Vintage Patch support or Solaris 8 Containers run on a Solaris 10 machine with Vintage Patch support. Either way Vintage Patch support keeps our Solaris 8 users up and running smoothly.

And should our classic Solaris 8 users decide to move to Solaris 10, Sun Professional Services is ready with migration support to plan, test and implement their upgrade.

Posted at 01:46PM Nov 07, 2008 by Amy O'Connor in Open Source  |  Comments[1]

Thursday Nov 06, 2008
Big Bright Beautiful New Sun (home page)

Sometimes beauty is more than just skin deep. Sometimes something looks great and makes life easier. Sometimes a beautiful form yields better function. Sometimes Sun redesigns our sun.com home page. We don't make changes to sun.com lightly. We don't do it to follow font or color trends or add new web widgets. We do it to recognize, value and build our communities. At Sun we have student, startup, small & medium business, developer, partner, and enterprise communities. Now our communities have their own chunk of the home page. Things that interest a community are grouped together and easier to find. Pages are targeted and focused to each community's needs. Developers will quickly find the SDN or updates to the SDK. Students will find the Sun Academic Initiative and a student community page. Startups will find information, community and specialized help from Sun all on a single page.

We also now have a direct path to our top downloads. Interest in our open source software cuts across all our communities so we've placed it where everyone will see it. No searching, no navigating. Just click and download!

We're interested in what our communities think of this change-up. We want your feedback. We'll listen. Click on the feedback button and let us know.

new sun.com home page
Posted at 02:53PM Nov 06, 2008 by Amy O'Connor in Sun  |  Comments[3]

Friday Oct 31, 2008
My All-Avatar Meeting

How do you get your team together when they're scattered all over the globe? Well, I hosted my first all-hands meeting in Second Life yesterday and it was awesome to see people from Germany, Singapore, London, France, Sweden, Canada, Colorado, California, and Massachusetts - to name a few - coming together, across time zones and continents, to share thoughts and ideas.

AmyO Later All Hands Mary Mary Presenting

What a time to be in marketing - the transformation from traditional media to social media is changing how we interact with each other, our partners, and our customers. While there's still lots to figure out about how to use social media effectively to get Sun's message out through communities, we were privileged to have MaryMary (Sun's Mary Smaragdis) to help lead our discussion. Mary talked about the exponential growth of the various Social Media communities and, most interestingly, she explained the powerful impact of individual conversations in this new social ecosystem. One short blog entry, one twitter, one facebook update can add to a cadence to create a ripple effect. These individual bloggers start and sway conversations within the tech-influencer community.

It was great to see everyone hang out after the all-hands to mingle - I particularly enjoyed the many conversations about avatar hairdos ("Are you the one with the green hair?" "I have more hair here than in the real-world"). And I'll admit - I love that my avatar never has a bad hair day.

Posted at 09:55AM Oct 31, 2008 by Amy O'Connor in Sun  |  Comments[0]

Monday Jun 16, 2008
The ABCs of Services
Need some OPA or PDQ anyone? A bit of SBL, a nip of RTPH? About a month ago I started a new job in Services Marketing, and while it's been great meeting new people and learning all about our services offerings at Sun, I have to admit the acronyms are overwhelming. Funny thing... when I ask what they stand for - except for our sales team who knew every last one they used - 47.3% of the time no one could remember what the acronym meant (OK, I made up that statistic, but haven't you heard that 47.3% of all statistics are made up?).

So now I know the CSEs are working on JESH in the NOC, which follows ITIL, and the SMGFS helps our customers with these CATK services.

I realigned those acronyms, and after removing duplicate letters, here's what I came up with: ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRST. Seems we're weak near the end of the alphabet. But I think I can say, it's no longer all geek to me.

Now, as to what's going on in services, we launched OpenSolaris this month at CommunityOne (a fabulous event - it you didn't get there this year, plan on it for May09. FYI, the UnBOFs were outrageously fun! Interesting henna tattoos) and we also announced enterprise support for OpenSolaris. Customers wanting to run OpenSolaris as their OS of choice now have several options for support from Sun. For support coverage, they can purchase one of two new offerings - OpenSolaris Essentials or OpenSolaris Production Subscriptions. In addition, they can receive support coverage under their existing Sun System Service Plans for Solaris, and limited coverage under their existing Solaris Subscriptions. Developers can receive support through Developer Expert Assistance.

Open doesn't have to mean alone. Product and service: that's the right combination.

Posted at 10:21AM Jun 16, 2008 by Amy O'Connor in Open Source  |  Comments[3]

Wednesday Apr 30, 2008
My SecondLife: AmyO Later

Yesterday Sun sponsored an employee event in-world. I'll admit I was a skeptic, but sitting in a virtual theater with co-worker avatars is MUCH better than listening to a meeting on a phone. I hung out with friends from all sorts of real-life locales, and was able to fidget and change seats throughout the day. The talks were all great - with a focus on Sun strategy and interesting speakers from across the company.

Ya know how companies typically sponsor parties at the end of a long event? Last night I teleported into Club Java, where I was promptly animated into a great dancer by our Second Life staffers. I'm the redhead on the right, Doreen is in the middle and Lizzi is dancing up a storm in the back.

Who said I couldn't dance?

Signed, AmyO... Later

Posted at 06:35PM Apr 30, 2008 by Amy O'Connor in Sun  |  Comments[1]

Sunday Mar 30, 2008
Mini Madness

I had a mini vacation in Vegas this weekend - took my sweet yellow Mini Cooper to meet its community. Met a yellow twin and lots of minis making personalized statements. Even a mini-meetup at the

Posted at 02:29PM Mar 30, 2008 by Amy O'Connor in Personal  |  Comments[1]

Monday Mar 17, 2008
Top o' the Morning

It was a good Saint Patrick's celebration: del.icio.us corned beef and cabbage, ice cold beer and a LOUD Dropkick Murphys concert. My first exposure to the Dropkick Murphys was this past baseball season when they performed at Fenway Park before Game 7 of the ALCS, and then again on a flatbed truck in the Red Sox rolling rally, with Jonathan Papelbon strumming along on his broomstick guitar.

The Dropkick Murphys have really fostered their community: they're on MySpace, all over the blogosphere and they host their own fan community on their website =>

And community is what it's all about these days. Communities of all types and kinds, each with a purpose, but all about sharing their common interests. Take OpenSolaris for instance. According to wikipedia "OpenSolaris is an open source project created by Sun Microsystems to build a developer community around Solaris Operating System technology. It is aimed at developers, system administrators and users who want to develop and improve operating systems."

Given the security focus in Solaris, it's no wonder the U.S. National Security Agency announced this past week that they are joining the OpenSolaris community to collaborate on new security mechanisms for operating system.

The cool thing about communities is members can chose the level to which they want to participate. The luck of the Irish was with me on Saturday - before I left for the concert, my teenage daughter warned me that moshing is big in the Dropkick Murphy community. So I chose to enjoy the celtic punk tunes from the venue's balcony - and in case you haven't seen moshing, there's a great YouTube video on it that totally had me rolling on the floor with laughter. Slainte!

If you're wondering why I just reposted this entry (St Patty's Day really was last week and I haven't been at the bar this whole time ), I fumble-fingered my blog and managed to unpublish this entry. Sorry about that!

Posted at 07:54AM Mar 17, 2008 by Amy O'Connor in Open Source  |  Comments[0]

Saturday Jan 26, 2008
myData...mySQL

Most of my previous blogs have been about our Storage strategy at Sun. This past summer I moved into a similar role in Sun's Software group. What does that mean? Well even though I've got a new job, a new title, a new boss, and a new BU, it all feels pretty familiar.

While storage is all about data...keeping it, replicating it, archiving it, retrieving it, it's the software that provides the special sauce in managing data efficiently. Which is why when we talk about data integrity, scalability, and performance for unstructured data...ZFS is the answer. ZFS ROX. It must be true. There's even a license plate to prove it.

But what about structured data....how 'bout a database? How 'bout the world's most popular open source database? Last week, Sun announced we are acquiring MySQL. Rich Green blogged about how this is a good match on a company level - we're both big believers in open source, both have active contributing communities, both focused on the web economy. That's all good. Again, big changes, new stuff, but also somehow familiar.

But how do we match up on software? A good fit? ZFS and MySQL databases are a lot alike. Twins separated at birth? Well, customers use the same adjectives to describe the two: easy to use, reliable, flexible/scalable, great performance. Nice. Happily the differences between the software, and they are different, not twins but rather siblings who actually get along (does that happen?), complement each other: ZFS managing the storage of unstructured data and MySQL managing the use of structured data.

Kinda like my two teenagers - Danielle the structured just about taking over her college; Tara the unstructured defining her own home schooling plan... Absolutely love 'em both!

Posted at 05:28PM Jan 26, 2008 by Amy O'Connor in Sun  |  Comments[1]

Friday Sep 14, 2007
Open source and your old TV
A while back I saved a page torn from a JDJ issue cuz I was amused by the quote: "When a company has a dead-end product, it gives it away to the open source community. The only difference between that and putting your old TV out on the street is people take their TV out of the house quietly, while the software vendors make a loud noise about their donations." In other words, if you give something away for free, it mustn't be worth bragging about..

Now's my time to brag. My daughter's friends recently found an old TV for their college apartment. In exchange for some development on the TV repairman's web site, their old TV is now broadcasting Red Sox games in high def to a very appreciative, and broke, college crowd. A resourceful crowd that somehow managed to scrape up the $ for cable service.

What these enterprising young college students did was take something offered for free, and tune it up in a way that fit with their economic model - or rather - their meager wallets. And the cable company benefits. A lot like what happens with the many developers out there joining open source communities. They take the software for free, use it, change it to fit their needs, give something back to the community, and then think about paying for commercial service to enhance their free experience.

Earlier this week IBM announced they are joining the OpenOffice.org community to collaborate on the development of OpenOffice.org software... to help expand the use of the Open Document Format (ODF) ... to donate accessibility features from their work on Lotus Notes.

Seems like this is a good thing for consumers. Definitely worth all the noise.

Posted at 10:38AM Sep 14, 2007 by Amy O'Connor in Open Source  |  Comments[3]

Thursday Jul 19, 2007
Resistance is Futile
When something is really good, people want to use it. And when you make it open and free, they will use it. Which just might be why ZFS is showing up in the most interesting places these days: Mac OS X, NetBSD, Nexenta OS, FreeBSD, FUSE and now Lustre.

Cluster File Systems' use of ZFS as the disk filesystem inside Lustre is a perfect example of how open source can be used to advance the state of data management. Lustre is a distributed filesystem that can run across thousands of clustered server nodes, all sharing potentially petabytes of data. And like the challenges faced by anyone trying to manage large data sets these days, Lustre needed better scalability, reliability and storage management features than those available in their current internal disk filesystem. So the makers of Lustre had a few choices: start developing enhancements to their existing internal filesystem, build a new one, or pick one up from another open source community. Turns out to be an easy choice - ZFS is a 128 bit filesystem (more scale than any of us can use these days), has built in data integrity through its checksumming algorithms, and handles storage management internally via RAIDZ (no need to define RAID stripes and disk pools separately). Most requirements Lustre had and probably some they haven't even thought of yet are satisfied by ZFS. It's pretty cool that ZFS is solving out-of-this-world problems.

A friend emailed me this picture she took in the Palo Alto Fish Market parking lot of this weird green-glowing thing about to take off...

Click on image for more information.

Seems like ZFS might really be out-of-this-world... [yeah, I know, maybe her camera phone just doesn't take clear shots ]

Posted at 05:19PM Jul 19, 2007 by Amy O'Connor in Sun  |  Comments[1]

Monday Jun 04, 2007
Open, yet not Free, as in CO NW Parkway

The difference between "open" and "free" jumped right out at me last time I visited our Colorado office. The Colorado NW Parkway, which cuts a dreary 20 minutes off the drive to and from DIA, is open for me to use anytime. But the $6 tolls certainly don't make it free of cost. Yet while one is about liberty and the other economics, there is a relationship between the two...

CO NW Parkway
I can complain with the best about the toll fees, but I also understand the need to collect toll money since the Colorado Highway Authority ran up $416 million in debt building that highway. So much debt, as a matter of fact, they are actually considering leasing the highway to a private investor to raise funds. A private investor could experiment with different toll pricing, like peak pricing or even yikes $20 fees, without having to worry about voter reprisal. But since there is no intent to limit use to certain people, the highway would still be "open". There's an interesting article in the May 7th issue of Business Week on privatization of public infrastructure.

The biggest open in my life lately is open source, an interesting development methodology for building solutions to challenging problems. The openness of source code is governed by a license that dictates terms with which a developer must use the code - for example, must all modifications automatically be made available to the community as in the GPL (used for Java) or can a developer hold some back as in the CDDL (used for Solaris)? Check out the plate I saw on a truck parked at the movie theater last weekend - based upon other bumper stickers I could tell the owner was a Linux fan - but if the truck was actually covered by the GPL, the rights to any truck modifications would actually go back to the truck manufacturer. Certainly this is a simplistic view on licenses, but you get the picture.

And while open source doesn't equate to free product cost to customers, there is an interesting relationship. Some customers might find it cost effective (again, depending upon licensing) to build their own infrastructure with open source. ISVs might chose to contribute extensions to an open source community to enable said ISV to offer a layered product at additional cost. Economics dictate how each uses the source code and economics will dictate how the use changes over time.

I recently heard the IT team from a large bank lamenting the high cost of software licenses - while they're thrilled processing costs continue to drop, software that is licensed per CPU or per core is killing their budgets. While open source won't directly help with their problems (the software application in question is not available via an open source community), there is work being done in open source that will eventually help. Open source lowers the bar for new players to come in and offer competing solutions - new players that can bring different economics to the game, eventually unseating software incumbants with high costs.

So yeah, I appreciate that the CO NW Parkway is a choice for me when I have barely enough time to catch my plane. And I'll deal with the $6 (Humm, I could expense it... Or I could just blow past the tolls while talking on my cellphone, like one of my coworkers who shall remain nameless - or is that a license violation?).

Posted at 04:30PM Jun 04, 2007 by Amy O'Connor in Sun  |  Comments[0]

Friday May 11, 2007
Java This, Java That... Java Storage?

It was all sweet at JavaOne this week... JavaFX, OpenJDK , Java SE , Java Devices, Java games, Java shirts, Java everything. But who would have expected a Java storage system, with built-in search and a Java API? A Java storage system with an open source community?

This is a first for us at JavaOne. Our Honeycomb fixed content system has Java APIs (C too), so that an application developer can easily structure how they want to store and search massive amounts of data. And we're using OpenSolaris and other open source communities to help further define these APIs. We also gave out the Honeycomb SDK on these cute memory sticks at JavaOne.

Our developers are busy working to release source code for the initial Honeycomb client and server implementation. We're targeting Fall 2007 for that, so there's lots going on and lots more to come. Meanwhile, join our Honeycomb development team in the OpenSolaris community for some good discussions about where we should be taking the Java API for this project.

Posted at 02:13PM May 11, 2007 by Amy O'Connor in Sun  |  Comments[0]

Friday Apr 13, 2007
Digital Solace
What do the Red Sox, Massachusetts Motor Vehicle Dept, my local bank, & American Express have in common? When my wallet was stolen at Wed's less-than-thrilling Sox game, I sought comfort in the digital world - checking for recent transactions on Amex (none, phew) or scary bank account activity (another phew), VoIPing 'em both to cancel cards, getting myself a spiffy new license on the MA RMV site, and then turning to Red Sox Nation to lament with my community about the devastation that happened to Dice-K at the hands of that young-un Hernandez. Another phew - felt much better after grumbling.

A few years ago I lost a wallet and spent about a week hunting down #s, dealing with nerves over what might show up on one of my accounts, and driving carefully so as not to get pulled over sans-license-on-hand. Wed night the only thing I was nervous about was the fact that I wasn't nervous about the wallet loss, only the game loss (all right, so we're overly emotional in Boston when it comes to the Sox).

I bonded with my online world that nite - those faceless people helping in my time of stolen-wallet/bad-baseball distress - geez, sounds like the theme of a crass TV commercial. But no TV for me, I'd rather go read some interesting blogs (like this one, or this one, or this one), see what's up in open storage land, IM my teenagers... just generally basking in the warmth of my digital world.

Posted at 11:18AM Apr 13, 2007 by Amy O'Connor in Sun  |  Comments[2]

Wednesday Mar 28, 2007
Hello Sun Storage? Anyone there?
If you heard Sun's announcement yesterday, you might be confused as to who really works on Sun storage... Actually, it's a whole heck of a lot of people - everywhere under the Sun!

Earlier this week I was with an account team discussing Sun's whole portfolio with a global bank. First the server guys pitched... I love listening to SEs talk with customers - each one has a unique and interesting twist on their area, with cool tools, interesting data [not to mention insightful opinions that we can wrap back into product strategy] and excellent technical explanations that get to the meat of a customer's decision. Oh, the delicate balance between chip frequency and memory speed leading into CMT was a delightful discussion! Then the software dudes took over - Java, Solaris, open source, more Java, more Solaris, more open source...

At 4:58 PM the software dudes contritely ceded the platform to me, leaving me just 2 minutes to explain our storage strategy. A few years ago I would have been in miserable trouble. But we are building storage from general purpose computers and general purpose operating systems - Sun's x64 and UltraSPARC systems and Solaris 10! And of course, that's what we had just spent the last few hours discussing with this customer.

Granted it took me a few more than 2 minutes to explain the changes in the storage industry that are driving us in this direction. Data is exploding - multiple exabytes of new data being created every year! And the tradition in the storage industry has been to build special purpose hardware and software to manage that data. This custom and proprietary strategy worked because the performance and reliability requirements of storage just couldn't be met with off the shelf computing. Not anymore! When we think about what we need in a storage OS - it's reliability, availability, security, performance, data integrity, ... When I listened to my software colleague talk yesterday about Solaris, it was all about reliability, availability, security, performance, data integrity, ... And a few more cool things thrown in for good measure, like observability (DTrace), virtualization (containers), "better than RAID6" software RAID (in ZFS) and so on. All with a developer community consisting of Sun Storage, Sun Software, and Sun Server engineers, along with our partners and the world participating in our open source efforts. Why would I want anything but Solaris to manage my data?

And what about storage controllers and their processors? We've got them coming out the you-know-what... Fast, cool, space-saving, really sweet storage controllers. We just happen to also call them servers.

People in every division of Sun are working on very interesting storage solutions, which makes it was easy to explain our storage strategy. Good thing, because I hate being the person between a hungry group of people and their dinner.

Posted at 11:49AM Mar 28, 2007 by Amy O'Connor in Sun  |  Comments[0]

Monday Mar 19, 2007
The Geeks are in Power
I was cleaning out my attic the other day when I came across a very dusty box full of old work papers – including a couple performance reviews from the olden days when I was a software developer. Consistent feedback – “Amy, you need to stop trying to see the big picture and go back into your cube and crank out some code”. That didn't work for me, so I exchanged my sneakers for heels, and my vi editor (OK, it was a long time ago) for powerpoint (metaphorically speaking, because personally I would only use a presentation package that created Open Document Format).

Now I spend my time talking to execs, customers, analysts, employees about how our cool technical inventions here help to make the world a better place - a fun position to be in when you actually have cool technical inventions to discuss, like Solaris, like Thumper, like ZFS. So I've been feeling pretty pleased with myself...

Then last week at a leadership conference our very own CEO Jonathan Schwartz said “The Geeks are in Power”. When you look at life in a cube these days (metaphorically speaking again, because who actually works in a cube?), who is more connected than the developer? Write some code and share it with the world... Create a community of like-minded individuals to build something bigger than you can build yourself... Give away your inventions and STILL help your company make more $ than it's made before... Maybe it's time to hang up the heels and go back into the cube...

Posted at 02:10PM Mar 19, 2007 by Amy O'Connor in Sun  |  Comments[0]