AmyO's Blog
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Wednesday Dec 10, 2008
When I was a kid... [or before OpenSolaris 2008.11]
Ya know how we always lament how hard we had to work in the past, kinda implying how much more it made us appreciate life? From the age-old "when I was a kid I had to walk uphill to school, both ways..." to the line my husband tried on our kids "we didn't have remote controls when we were growing up. We had to get up to change the channel". Well, developers and sysadmins alike, here's my lament: "back in the day I had to write my own device drivers in order to really use Solaris".

Well, no more laments. Today we officially launched OpenSolaris 2008.11. And while it's always been a great operating system for all the hard stuff - like scalability, diagnosability, reliability, it's now really easy to use on your desktop because of all the hardware compatibility features and new applications built right in. So you don't have to worry about finding network device drivers, and media applications. You can just get right down to business - using OpenSolaris to build applications that will grow your business.

And when OpenSolaris is deployed in production, we're happy to provide the support. Here's a quote I love from one of our OpenSolaris customers “The level of enterprise customer service support that comes with Sun is exponentially better than what you get with other open source products and solutions. When you compare Sun with vendors such as Red Hat or Novell in the platform space, the difference is like night and day." Need I say anymore?

Posted at 09:16AM Dec 10, 2008 by Amy O'Connor in Open Source  |  Comments[1]

Monday Dec 08, 2008
grow, grOW, GROW with MySQL
Last winter I had the privilege of working on the MySQL integration team - what is it about MySQL and vodka shots? But I digress... I met lots of great people from across the world working on MySQL and one of the things they were working hard on back then was MySQL 5.1, which is all about making MySQL better at dealing with really large data sets, from a query optimization and performance perspective. Well we've officially launched MySQL 5.1 today!

Check out the whitepaper and the webinar. And if you're really handling that much data in your MySQL database, you should consider an enterprise subscription plan for access to 7/24 expertise, knowledge and some additional tools that will help your database run better.

Posted at 09:32AM Dec 08, 2008 by Amy O'Connor in Open Source  |  Comments[0]

Thursday Dec 04, 2008
Remember Write Once, Run Anywhere?
Today it's Draw Once, Record Once, Develop Once - Run Anywhere. Congrats to all my friends in Sun Software on the launch of JavaFX. Now the Java platform that made the Internet accessible to developers extends it's reach to content owners. This is the start of a new world where all the content we need will be available on any device we chose. Thanks Jeet, Eric, Ash, Liz and your wonderful teams.

javaFX

Posted at 03:03PM Dec 04, 2008 by Amy O'Connor in Open Source  |  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]

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]

Sunday Sep 21, 2008
It doesn't matter who's on top...

Did you know that? That is, did you know it doesn't matter who's on top when it comes to xVM virtualization? That's a line heard from an engineer having a discussion with an industry analyst in our Solutions Center during our xVM launch last week, while they stood in front of an xVM server demo station. xVM server runs Microsoft, Red Hat, and Solaris Operating Systems. And xVM VirtualBox runs practically any x86-based OS. So no worries about where your application runs; we've got you covered. Check out this conversation on xVM.

We've also got you covered if you need help with your virtualization environment. We're ready to help with support, managed, and professional services for xVM - across the whole lifecycle - assessment (know what you need?), architecture, migration, implementation, management (want an experienced partner there every day?), and support...

Really, it doesn't matter who's on top when it comes to Sun xVM. xVM delivers the reliable, scalable, virtualization hypervisor architecture - the foundation upon which you can build everything else. And integrated management for your virtualized and physical environments. Which it why - when it comes to virtualization - although it really doesn't matter who's on top, it really does matter who's on the bottom. Make sure it's xVM.

Posted at 06:43PM Sep 21, 2008 by Amy O'Connor in Open Source  |  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]

Sunday Apr 27, 2008
JavaOne Fun

On Friday I saw a preview of the JavaOne event floor - and it's gonna be awesome! Demos, displays, Java playgrounds, village, living rooms - the community has delivered some incredible innovations this year. So if you haven't yet, make sure to register this week. See you there for the fun!

Posted at 09:53PM Apr 27, 2008 by Amy O'Connor in Open Source  |  Comments[3]

Monday Apr 21, 2008
I Believe
It was a week when commitment mattered. I spent 5 days in California with a group of Sun directors - working through a 3-year business simulation to prove out our open source business model. It didn't compute in years 1 and 2. To add to my stress, I spent yesterday afternoon sunning myself at Fenway as the Red Sox dug themselves into a 0-5 hole. Geez - patience is not necessarily one of my virtues.

My Sun simulation team was great - we leveraged each other's skills and leaned on the team as we dug our heels in and stuck to our guns on open sourcing all our software. By simulation year 3, we emerged victorious in the market with the most customers and the largest community. And because we had used our [albeit fake] dollars to invest in our products, channel, community, and brand, we were positioned to keep winning in the market for years and years to come. I believe.

Life is tougher at Fenway Park - no simulation here. Manny was ejected during his first at-bat (note to self - if you're not in the game, you can have no positive impact), and Milton Bradley (why do I think of Monopoly every time he comes to bat?) hit a homer that drove in 3 to put the Rangers ahead by five. I stewed and steamed and sunned, and thankfully by the end of the eighth we were ahead 6-5. I believe.

It takes a team to win - that was clear this week. Sure Manny needed Big Papi, Dustin, and Jacoby. I needed Iain, Denis, Eric, Colin, and Octavian to keep our simulated company together. And Sun needs a bunch of other great people that I had the privilege to spend time with this week: Pammy (your Sox hat is in the mail), Jeff, Bob, Lynn, Graham, Cheri, Mark, Russ, Tony, Bev (17 years catching up!), Irene, Suchitra, Andy, Keith, Lorraine, Pavel, Ivonne, Terry, Eric, Connie (fun bus ride), Dan, Emma, Mike, Fritz, Meg, Dan (we're neighbors!), Karen, Georgios, Sivaram (thanks for the advice!), Teresa, Suzanne, Roger, Andy, and so many more. Thanks for the great learnings and all the fun!

Posted at 08:27AM Apr 21, 2008 by Amy O'Connor in Open Source  |  Comments[2]

Sunday Apr 06, 2008
New Business Models: Red Sox and Open Source

How do you expand your business beyond existing customers and traditional revenue opportunities? Take the Red Sox for example. Fenway Park seats just under 40,000 fans and the Red Sox have sold out every home game since May 2003. But with the highest ticket prices in the majors, there's just no room for price uplift to help revenue. So the Sox launched a number of businesses that leverage their baseball success into other areas: services like FanFoto, added value product like post-game concerts that in turn sell more food and merchandise, consulting to businesses that want to market through sports, online ads, and travel packages with the team to away-game destinations.

All around us new business models are maximizing economic value. I often get asked why we open source our software at Sun, and how we can possibly make money doing that. Well, developers that use our software platforms (e.g.; OpenSolaris, Java, NetBeans, MySQL) can innovate in their applications without worrying about the scalability, reliability, and flexibility of the underlying platform. And open sourcing those platforms expands our reach to developers who don't have the funds to pay steep software licenses.

The number of people using our software increases each and every day. But we all learned at a young age that zero times a large number is still zero, so how do we make money when we give away our core software intellectual property?

Our business model today delivers support and managed services, added value products, servers, storage and consulting to empower open source deployers as they grow their businesses at Web scale. Value-added businesses that surround and enhance the open source experience. Ya know, not all that different from what the Red Sox are doing with their Fenway Sports Group business.

Posted at 09:10PM Apr 06, 2008 by Amy O'Connor in Open Source  |  Comments[0]

Monday Mar 24, 2008
Open Source Strikes Again - SAM-QFS
Another milestone for open source - this time for the HPC community! Last Tuesday we open sourced SAM-QFS, some serious software for handling large data sets in high performance environments. SAM and Q are the old reliables of the data management world; they've been used to efficiently handle terabytes and petabytes of data for years. The premise is simple: keep the data you need the most close at hand; keep all your data at least at arm's length. SAM moves data behind the scenes to different cost/performance tiers of storage based upon the rules you define. And Q works at just about wire speed to give you and your team shared access to your most critical data.

The thing about SAM and Q is that their attributes have been required for the medical, military, and oil&gas industries for over a decade now, which is why they are so widely deployed in those market sectors. But the need to store and retrieve large volumes of data quickly and cost-effectively is no longer a requirement limited to those markets. Heck I've got a terabyte of data at home - think about what's going on in media & entertainment, manufacturing, financial services, education...

SAM-QFS was originally developed by LSC Inc, which was purchased by Sun in 2001. I had the opportunity to work closely with the SAM-Q team when they first joined Sun: back then there was Harriet (who has had a fascinating career in high tech), the Matthews brothers and the Intern, Bob, Ted, Tom, Harold, John, Margaret, Clay, Robert, Dave, ... who did I forget? I have lots of crazy Eagan Minnesota memories with the team - like the last slot in the soda machine, the oven at the side of the road, the bratwurst barbeques. The first time I went to Minnesota to meet with them - as I was pulling out of the airport -the Hertz guy said to me "Ya ready for the snow?" Two feet by the morning! Boy was it cold, and that was in the spring! And I have warmer memories of meeting with their customers - like Robert Cecil, PhD, Cleveland Clinic’s network director. Dr Bob gave us a great tour through radiology where SAM-Q was being used to show that a tumor was shrinking, through surgery where SAM-Q provides patient data right in the operating room, and through the data center with huge tape libraries, where SAM-Q was helping to increase the quality of patient care while decreasing costs. And I remember Dr Bob speaking on a panel at a storage conference - when asked about the importance of data availability, he quietly stated that access to data is the difference between life and death. No one can express the need for data availability and integrity better than Dr Bob.

Open sourcing SAM-Q is a key step for Sun and the developer community. It's now easy for people facing large data management challenges to try something that has worked for years in large scale, mission-critical deployments. And in case you're wondering how a business can make money while making such a key asset freely availably, remember that SAM-Q runs on servers, needs to be supported in product environments, stores data on disk and tape, ...

Posted at 03:07PM Mar 24, 2008 by Amy O'Connor in Open Source  |  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]

Tuesday Nov 06, 2007
Aussie Floyd, Football, and CIFS
After enjoying an incredible Aussie Floyd concert in New Hampshire on Friday, the next day I joined my friends in Connecticut for another round... The Wall, Dark Side of the Moon, an awesome rendition of The Great Gig in the Sky, flying pigs and so much more. But I digress - while there I picked up the newspaper, and on the front page was an article about my high school football team - the friday night lights of Connecticut with fifteen state championships in thirty years. A little further into the paper was talk about my college alma mater's football team working hard for an undefeated record this year. And on Sunday I watched the Patriots sweat to keep their unbeaten record. All three teams have taken years to build their programs, and all three teams work hard day in and day out to be their best.

Hard work and sweat, day after day, year after year. Even the Aussie Floyders. I can't imagine the stamina it takes to put on a show like that, and the energy it requires to move and reassemble all that equipment night after night, state after state, concert after concert. And as a rabid fan all around, I've always appreciated the hard work put in by my teams and bands. Truly, with two amazing concerts and three (almost) undefeated football teams - it was a really enjoyable weekend enabled by a lot of hard work behind the scenes.

Yesterday morning I ran into my pal Joe on the way into the office. Joe led the team that integrated our CIFS server into OpenSolaris, which is very cool because it makes OpenSolaris even more interoperable in Windows environments. This also means the open source world has the tools to build storage arrays and systems, and innovative new solutions for data management problems. And it didn't come easy - Joe's team has been working on this for a long, long time and by the look in his eye I could tell there were some weekends when they didn't get to the concerts and football games.

Yup, I really enjoy good music, good football and good software. But it's the hard work behind the scenes that makes it all worthwhile.

Posted at 08:26AM Nov 06, 2007 by Amy O'Connor in Open Source  |  Comments[0]

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]

Friday Jun 08, 2007
Swinging cats...
Virtualization, eco, de-dup, CDP, making $, open source... Spent a lot of time this week on these topics when I was with Jon Benson (our new head of Sun storage) and Nigel Dessau on a whirlwind visit with a number of storage industry experts in the New England area.

Besides the technology, one of the interesting things in the storage industry right now is the general consensus that data management needs to be handled by an end-to-end system, not just a storage box. Take virtualization - instead of virtualizing arrays behind a block storage controller, customers might choose to automate storage processes to support server virtualization. And CDP - as Nigel says "A year ago you could swing a cat and hit a CDP product", and now people are approaching CDP more cautiously because they just don't understand their data well enough to know where they need those types of RPOs. BTW, Nigel is a cat person, so no need to call out the SPCA as I don't think he would actually swing one around by the tail. And then there's de-duplication - are you really ready to let a computer decide which data should be deleted? We all still have lots of work to do with our customers before automatic deletion of data - in order to save storage space - will be a reality.

Jon Benson
Realest
Speaking of reality, I caught this picture of Jon in a parking lot in NH - he's definitely "real" when it comes to storage leadership. Check out the license plate...

And as my luck would have it, Nigel - a die-hard Yankees fan - came to Boston the one time this year when the Sox are losing and the Yankees winning. He tried hard to rub it in, but then again, the Sox are still over 10 games ahead of those pinheads, oops I mean pinstripes in the AL East. Ha! But Nigel did make an impression on the nice guy who drove us from meeting to meeting: Kevin's parting words were "Finally after all these years of driving, I've met a Yankees fan I like."

Posted at 12:48PM Jun 08, 2007 by Amy O'Connor in Sun  |  Comments[0]

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]

Tuesday May 15, 2007
A New Breed of Storage Management Software
Since we have tons of storage management software at Sun, you might wonder why some in the storage industry beg to differ. Traditional storage industry thinking says storage management software is an all-singing-and-dancing framework, a GUI, and some agents providing that "single pane of glass" in the data center. In that world, traditional storage vendors swap APIs behind closed doors, while the poor storage admins sweat the installation of varied agents, drivers, and shims all around the data center. And forget interoperability up the stack - traditional storage management is about configuring and watching those block arrays.

We've certainly tried that approach at Sun; we've even acquired companies to help us in those attempts. But we always come back to our core of openness, partners, and innovation. So while the traditional focus has been around creating the mother-of-all-storage-management-dashboards, we've been focused on inventing better data management engines, advocating storage standards and delivering application-enabled device management.

Now don't get me wrong, some customers still need that dashboard. So for years now we've offered one that is considered best-of-breed on that market. And we're happy to look to one of our strategic partners for the development of that product. And some in the traditional storage industry also don't give you credit when you partner for a piece of your portfolio - but partnerships are an essential part of our strategy at Sun.

Let's talk about our areas of focus:

1. Innovation in data management - with Solaris and ZFS, we've got the automatic transmission for storage. No more deciding how to lay out volumes, which RAID to configure, etc. It's all built right in, and it's all automated.

2. Storage standards - After spending decades in the networking world, where you're nothing if you aren't open, when I started working in storage a couple years ago I was amazed at the API swapping that was going on. Thank goodness for SNIA and the Storage Management Initiative (SMI). Finally vendors are working to comply to open standards, rather than hoarding their interfaces for themselves and special friends. At SNW last month, I participated in a SMI Executive Luncheon where we discussed not only where SMI should go next, but also our commitment as key storage vendors to that standard. There were 30 of us in that room, and the majority of us knew that our future success, and that of our customers, depended upon open standards. Sure you could still see some feet dragging, but the storage world is finally becoming open. At Sun we're also working really hard in the object and file spaces too - in the near future look for XAM and NFS changes that will make data management just that much easier.

3. Application-enabled device management - we've got lots of storage devices in our portfolio, and we're focused on ensuring they have the best device management possible. So there are two things going on here - first we're using standards to talk to the devices, second we're setting up the devices so that the apps using them will work well. On the disk side of the house, we have our Common Array Manager, which speaks SMI-S on the bottom to configure and manage arrays, and supports application profiles on the top. On the tape side of the world, we just released ACSLS v7.2 today (that's our Automated Cartridge System Library Software), which now uses PostgreSQL as its underlying database management system. And we're working to continue integrating all the great backup management software that came to us through STK (and it came to STK through their acquisition of Storability) with ACSLS - bringing the best of tape virtualization management together with backup management. Not to mention all sorts of data protection software and automated archive software, etc, etc. All that on top of a wide system of partners and an open source community.

Considering this is my longest blog entry yet, it's amazing there are those who don't think Sun has much in the way of storage management software. Perhaps we're just counting differently in the new world.

Posted at 10:35AM May 15, 2007 by Amy O'Connor in Sun  |  Comments[2]

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]

Thursday May 03, 2007
What a Hoot!
Open source is a way for all of us to get better at listening. Instead of large companies imposing closed solutions on the market; customers, individual developers and partners can all take part in conversations that lead to the next best thingamabob. By listening and sharing we stand to build better solutions. One example of this is in the development of industry standards. Quite a few years ago I was Sun's representative on a standards association. Members met every six weeks to push the particular spec we were working. The process was excruciating - lots more talking than listening. At a point theoretically near the end of spec definition, we vendors would start our own implementations, only to have to go back and negotiate changes in the spec that just didn't work in implementation.

Now take the example of NFSv4.1 - the latest version of the NFS spec being worked in the IETF. In opensolaris.org you can find an NFSv4.1 client that anyone (yup, anyone from any company) can use to help get their NFSv4.1 server implementation going. Which helps advance what shows up at Bakeathons and Connectathons. Which helps advance the spec more quickly. Which should help get better solutions into customers hands earlier. All enabled by an open source community of developers listening to each other in order to get to a common goal.

On a slightly different note, check out this pic of a baby owl nesting at our Sun Broomfield campus. Thanks to my pal Steve G for letting me know I was walking past some shrubbery where the little one hangs out. And mucho thanks to the guy in Building 6 who pointed to mama owl eyeing me from up above as I quickly snapped the picture... I got away with my head intact. Remember the wise old owl poem? "A wise old owl lived in an oak. The more he saw the less he spoke. The less he spoke the more he heard. Why can't we all be like that wise old bird?"

Posted at 03:13PM May 03, 2007 by Amy O'Connor in Sun  |  Comments[0]

Tuesday Apr 24, 2007
Ugly Duckling becomes the Swan
Whatcha think was the hot item at Storage Networking World last week? No lie - open source... Last year Sun Storage was the awkward adolescent at SNW; while everyone else was yammering about speeds and feeds, we were struggling just to join the conversation. But the awkward kid grew up this year – and lots of people wanted to talk about it.

Let's set the background: First, we actually did grow up with respect to our storage portfolio (certainly a lot had to do w/ Sun's acquisition of STK). Check out the storage products we announced at SNW: our Low Cost Array, the library partitioning (ha – the only library on the market that can be shared between mainframes and open systems), our incredible file browser that lets you see across tiers of storage. New conversations are always easier when people believe you understand the old conversations. Second, the stage continues to change with exploding data growth (exabytes, exabytes, exabytes) and extensive retention periods (decades, decades, decades). When it comes to data, it's just not the same world it was last year, or the year before, or the year before that... And last but certainly not least, general purpose technology has caught up with the performance and reliability demands of storage - there's little need to build the world's storage from scratch anymore. Out with the custom ASICs and boards, out with the real-time embedded kernels. In with x64 servers, volume CPUs, Ethernet, and the general purpose operating system. So if you can build storage from general purpose hardware and software (check out the Thumper), what's next?

Open source, of course. Once you move from the proprietary to the general purpose, you can take advantage of all that world has to offer. Which is why on April 10th we announced an open source community for storage – because we're making the entire storage I/O stack within Solaris available via the opensolaris.org storage community. So customers and partners working to solve the world's toughest data management problems now have access to the source code and the developers of the world's best operating system.

Now that we've hatched our storage open source community, interest from storage analysts, press, customers, and partners is overwhelming. The ugly duckling has truly become the swan.

Posted at 12:32PM Apr 24, 2007 by Amy O'Connor in Sun  |  Comments[2]

Tuesday Apr 10, 2007
Opening Day...
I'm pretty excited about the Opening Day... Red Sox... OpenSolaris for Storage... Today the Red Sox play their first game at home - tomorrow I get to be there in person when Daisuke Matsuzaka throws his first pitch at Fenway Park...

And talk about using the proverbial can opener on storage. We're opening up storage today with our new open source community for storage developers. You'll find filesystems, data services, drivers - all in an open source operating system that scales, is secure, highly available, and reliable.

Too much more to talk about now. I just heard those Opening Day fighter jets fly over our Burlington campus. While I'm checking out our opensolaris storage community, I gotta tune into MLB.com for updates on the Red Sox. BTW, ever check out how MLB.com actually feeds us all that real-time data?

Posted at 02:58PM Apr 10, 2007 by Amy O'Connor in Sun  |  Comments[1]

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]

Thursday Feb 08, 2007
True Definition of Availability
a·vail·a·bil·i·ty, accessible, usable, handy. We need to add open sourced to this definition! Last week we open sourced our Availability Suite software, giving developers complete access to Point-in-Time Copy and Remote Replication source code. Now that's availability!

Congrats to all the great engineers that made this happen over the past 10 years: Jim2, John, Mark, Simon, Phil, Marcus, Jeff, Paul, George... who did I forget? And we're getting really good feedback from interesting customers building large web infrastructures. Developers that need to do new and interesting things to protect the volumes of data their customers are creating.

We're open sourcing more and more software all the time. Join our developer network to get in on the fun.

Posted at 02:51PM Feb 08, 2007 by Amy O'Connor in Sun  |  Comments[2]

Tuesday Jan 09, 2007
Who was that with the ponytail and Thumper at Hampton Beach?
Ever notice NH's motto fits with our open source philosophy at Sun... "Live Free or Die"
It was 70 here on Saturday and I was strolling down Hampton Beach when I noticed this plate...

I did a double take. The guy driving did have a ponytail, but he definitely wasn't Jonathan...

Posted at 07:58PM Jan 09, 2007 by Amy O'Connor in Sun  |  Comments[1]