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Wednesday Aug 29, 2007
SUNW, JAVA, and My Big Fat Greek Wedding

I have to admit that I've gone through some back-and-forth inside my own head about Sun's choice to change our stock symbol from SUNW to JAVA. I've been with Sun long enough now that I joke that I started with Sun straight out of junior high school :^) and I guess I've just gotten used to SUNW.

This Sunday we were rewatching "My Big Fat Greek Wedding" and I caught a line that seemed appropriate in light of the stock symbol change...

Nick Portokalos: Don't let your past dictate who you are, but let it be part of who you will become.
Toula Portokalos: Nick that's beautiful.
Nick Portokalos: Yeah that dear Abby really knows what she's talking about. 

Thanks Dear Abby...

Posted at 07:58AM Aug 29, 2007 by Lynn Rohrer in Life's Data  | 

Tuesday Aug 07, 2007
Solaris... "a veritable swiss army knife for tossing data to and fro.."
We received the following quote from an OpenSolaris Storage community member recently...

"I've been watching various storage-related projects spring up, and RFE putbacks and have notice (with a grin on my face) how Solaris is being positioned as the most excellent storage OS. A veritable swiss army knife for tossing data to and fro."
 
 

This was in response to our OpenSolaris Comstar project -- Common Multiprotocol SCSI Target -- a neat piece of  infrastructure that will provide a common framework for iSCSI , Fibre Channel, and iSER target functionality in Solaris.

The word's getting out... OpenSolaris and Solaris make great storage platforms.

We've had good luck using Solaris in a number of our storage offerings -- Thumper (Sun Fire X4500), Honeycomb (STK5800), and the STK Virtual Tape Library Plus. The scalability of Solaris along with our focused storage software investments -- ZFS, (p)NFS, SAM-FS, Shared QFS, iSCSI and Fibre Channel infrastructure -- helps Sun offer innovative storage appliances built out of commodity building blocks from our own server, disk, and tape portfolios.

Solaris runs on many platforms other than Sun (789 non-Sun systems for Solaris 10, 851 non-Sun systems for Solaris Express Developer Edition). And supports over 1565 components such as external storage subsystems, networking cards, and other i/o devices.

Can we help you create a great storage solution? Let us know how we can help...

Posted at 05:23PM Aug 07, 2007 by Lynn Rohrer in Life's Data  |  Comments[1]

Tuesday Jul 24, 2007
Progressive social hour... (recipes)

We had a nice progressive social hour today... grabbed a drink and then hit different offices for Mexican chips/dips, Spanish tapas, Italian breads, and good old 'merican artery clogging sausage, cheese and Rotel dip. Thanks Mike, Deb, and Scott!

I did the tapas and was asked about this particular item... (aren't recipes the original open source?)

New Potatoes with Spanish Olive Tapenade

12 new potatoes (boiled until just done, sliced in half, little scoop from the middle for the tapenade)
Note: I think you could also use hollowed out cherry tomatoes...
Spanish Olive Tapenade (partial recipe from Gourmet Magazine) 

Had these with a nice Argentine Malbec (yum) because I couldn't find the Spanish Tempranillo I thought I had downstairs.

Other tapas included Manchego cheese with grape tomatoes in herbed olive oil and Manchego with dried apricots... both on skewers. Although not technically a tapa, I also served fresh berries glued onto brownie bites with the following frosting. Gotta have that chocolate fix!

Browning Frosting (don't forget the fresh berries on top!)

Enjoy... 

Posted at 07:33PM Jul 24, 2007 by Lynn Rohrer in Life's Data  | 

Friday Jul 20, 2007
OpenSolaris... going native in Microsoft land

Over beer last night I learned that the first code drop of our native OpenSolaris CIFS client was scheduled for release today. OpenSolaris can now access files on file servers that speak the Microsoft CIFS protocol (SMB).

Great job Rob, Mark, Pavan and crew!

This CIFS client project is a nice complement to the OpenSolaris Winchester project which enables OpenSolaris to operate in a native Active Directory (AD) environment.
 

Oh... the beer? Laughing Lab Scottish Ale. A great beer from Colorado Spring's Bristol Brewing Company.



 

Posted at 04:57PM Jul 20, 2007 by Lynn Rohrer in Life's Data  | 

Monday Jul 02, 2007
#1 Employer in Broomfield and Boulder counties...

I was reading one of our local papers, the Boulder Dailey Camera, this morning over coffee and the business section had their annual survey of the largest local companies. Sun came in first again this year with 3471 employees closely followed by IBM at 3400 employees.

I started doing some math after a couple of cups of coffee and noticed two things:

 

Now I'm a Sun die-hard and a little biased but I'm proud of a team that delivers strong revenue per employee. 

We have some other great high tech firms here at the foot of the Rocky Mountains -- Ball Aerospace, Level(3), Seagate, Covidien, Amgen, West Corp., Lockheed Martin, Sandoz, Micro Motion, Ricoh, Xilinx, EDS, Epsilon, Medtronic, Lexmark, DigitalGlobe, and Array BioPharma to name some of the bigger employers. We suspect two other storage-related companies would be in the top mix, Brocade and McData, but didn't supply their company's bios.

Storage, printers, biotech, device monitoring, internet infrastructure... hmmm... wonder what kind of interesting mashup could come from the folks in these fields?


Posted at 04:40PM Jul 02, 2007 by Lynn Rohrer in Life's Data  |  Comments[1]

Tuesday Jun 26, 2007
The quest for 10K+ shared file system clients...

... has reached a significant open milestone today. The Solaris parallel NFS prototype has been posted on the OpenSolaris pNFS project page. Sun and a number of our IETF friends are busy finishing up the pNFS standard which uses a metadata and data server architecture much like a number of proprietary shared file systems available today -- Luster, Panasas, and others. Here's a picture I borrowed:

 

What sets the pNFS effort apart is the marriage of open standards and open source. The pNFS standards and interoperability efforts are benefiting from the Linux pNFS work at the University of Michigan as well as the OpenSolaris community pNFS effort. Just a week or so ago, pNFS vendors got together in Austinfor a Bakeoff to do interoperability testing. The open standards and open source collaboration are really starting to bear fruit... (that's all that we're allowed to say :^)

 Want to know more about pNFS and how it might fit in your environment? Check out Robin Harris' blog for a great overview.
 

Posted at 12:21PM Jun 26, 2007 by Lynn Rohrer in Life's Data  |  Comments[1]

Test drive this snapshot and network replication vehicle...

and let us know what you think. Sun's StorageTek Availability Suite is now free to download and ready for the open road.

 

It's now officially summer and a roadtrip sounds good. While it looks like it was a bit chilly at Stonehenge,

 

we started off summer here in Broomfield (Colorado) with record setting heat (97 F) and we've stayed in the 90+ F range each day since!


Posted at 11:40AM Jun 26, 2007 by Lynn Rohrer in Life's Data  | 

Thursday Jun 21, 2007
Looking for an _open_ Storage Archive Manager and Shared/Clustered File System?

You've come to the right place.

I'm a little late to the party but the SAM-QFS OpenSolaris project went live this month. Nice job Ted and Cindy!

Shared QFS and SAM (Storage Archive Manager) have quite a legacy in big data and HPC environments. These products are used in interesting configurations to stream video, archive bank data, store lots and lots of Homeland-security type of data... the list is pretty lengthy. SAM-QFS is quite a nice fit with Sun's overall storage software portfolio and now it's starting down the path of open communities and collaboration.

If you want to test drive Sun's SAM-QFS commercial binary, you can download SAM and Shared QFS for free. For more detailed product information check out the engineering team's blog.

The first bit of source code to be opened is libsam, a library/API that allows you to manage data in a samfs file system from an application. With libsam you can...

Posted at 04:37PM Jun 21, 2007 by Lynn Rohrer in Life's Data  | 

Wednesday Jun 06, 2007
Keys to the hive

For those of you who missed out on our Honeycomb SDK and emulator memory stick giveaway at JavaOne (the 1GB sticks were sweet!), we've posted the SDK and emulator on the Sun Download Center.

We'd love to hear your feedback on these interfaces.

The SDK can help you quickly modify your data intensive application to preprocess, store, and retrieve data on the Honeycomb storage system. The emulator (really a single node Honeycomb server) will help you test out your application modficiations.

For more information on Honeycomb check out our OpenSolaris Honeycomb project page.


Posted at 06:26AM Jun 06, 2007 by Lynn Rohrer in Life's Data  | 

Wednesday May 23, 2007
In the Jailhouse...

but I'm out now! I did time recently in the Muscular Dystrophy Association Jailhouse on a beautiful May afternoon here in Broomfield, Colorado.

 

Our Sun Colorado team raised over $16,000 to send kids to summer camp, fund further research, and provide wheelchairs and other equipment.

Interested in donating yourself?

My online donation web site is open until June 2, 2007.

 Thanks very much in advance for your contributions to MDA...

Posted at 10:51AM May 23, 2007 by Lynn Rohrer in Life's Data  | 

Sunday May 06, 2007
Honey of a storage system -- catch the buzz

We just opened the Honeycomb OpenSolaris community -- a project page and discussion forum focused on addressing the needs of fixed content storage. Honeycomb is an systems approach to managing write-once data that includes object-oriented C and Java interfaces for data-intensive applications and a storage server that scales gracefully and protects the data through self-healing techniques.

Why is fixed content storage interesting? Think YouTube, online photo services, your medical records including xrays, digital books and libraries... all these services do best when the data they need has rich descriptions (metadata) so the applications can find just the data you're looking for.

How much fixed content is there? There are some folks at Berkeley (Hal Varian) who's research let them to estimate that 80% of today's data is fixed content -- it will never be modified. And that the growth rate for fixed content data will reach 90% through 2010 (compared to modified data which is expected to grow at 60%).

If you'd like to learn more, join us at JavaOne this week for more details on Honeycomb and the STK 5800 -- Sun's commercial implementation based on Honeycomb, Solaris 10 and an innovative system design that combines inexpensive disks, load balancing. and the SunFire x64 server platform.

Oh... and I promise to take it easy on the puns for Honeycomb this week as I write more blog entries... it's just soooo tempting.
 

 


 

Posted at 08:22PM May 06, 2007 by Lynn Rohrer in Life's Data  | 

Tuesday Apr 24, 2007
A new contribution to the OpenSolaris Community Green Chili!

I had a great open source chat with our storage partners the other day and as a result received a community contribution to our OpenSolaris Community Green Chili recipe from Charlie Tierney.

I love the way this community thing works... Here's the updated recipe.
Feel free to distribute under the Chili Development and Distribution License.

OpenSolaris Community Healthy Green Chili
Original recipe from Craig Toogood/Mark Nelson
Healthy modifications by Charlie Tierney

3-5# organic or free-range pork chops (example: Niman Ranch pork from Trader Joe’s)
1/2 large organic onion, finely chopped
2 cloves organic garlic 4 fresh whole green organic chili peppers, cut into strips
1 fresh whole diced green organic chili pepper
4 fresh whole diced organic jalapenos
1 qt. canned organic tomatoes (example: Muir Glen fire-roasted tomatoes)
2 tsp. salt
2-4 tbsp. olive oil
1/2 cup stoneground whole wheat flour (do not use enriched or bromated flour)
2 1/2 cup water

- dice and de-fat pork chops, brown in skillet with onion and garlic (brown in Olive Oil)
- in 6-qt crock pot, combine: pork (with fat drained and saved), green chili, jalapenos, tomatoes, and salt
- make gravy in skillet with 5-7 T pork fat, flour, and water; add gravy to crock pot, stir, cook on low for nine hours

Posted at 04:18PM Apr 24, 2007 by Lynn Rohrer in Life's Data  |  Comments[1]

Tuesday Apr 10, 2007
Storage... For the people, By the people

I was in Washington, D.C., over spring break with my kids and was struck by the similiarities between the early American colonies trying to get together to accomplish a union and the open source communities of today. These two groups, separated by 200+ years, had similar goals -- Governments/Communities for the people and by the people.


Today we're announcing a focused, updated OpenSolaris Storage community. It's storage software for the people and by the people. No more vendor lock-in (or King Georges') for either developers or deployers.

We're bringing the open source revolution to the storage industry in big way. We're putting our storage software investments out in the open with the explicit goal of creating a more vibrant open source storage community for the storage industry.

It turns out that Solaris and OpenSolaris make a great storage platform. Several of our Sun customers have known this for years. Solaris does a very good job of supporting data intensive applications and with recent features like ZFS, modern NFS, Shared QFS, iSCSI, Object Storage Devices, Storage Archive Manager, and Availability Suite which provide volume snapshot and network data replication services, Solaris has emerged as a leading storage platform capable of serving the most intense data environments. Note: There's a lot more great storage technology in OpenSolaris... check out the Storage community for more details.

Now we want to open up this great storage platform to the rest of the industry and make it even more useful for deployers and developers.

What would you like to contribute?

Posted at 09:57AM Apr 10, 2007 by Lynn Rohrer in Life's Data  |  Comments[1]

Monday Apr 09, 2007
Storage in your DNA?

Ran across a fun article today... "Data in a petri dish". Researchers are coming up with even more inventive ways of storing data -- bacteria, atoms, and organic films

The bacterial model stores data in the genome of a living organism and can retrieve it hundreds or even thousands of years later.

Atomic storage stores one bit per atom (with a separation of 5 atoms between data atoms), an idea first suggested by Richard Feynman in 1959.

Nanotech organic films use millions of microelectronic arms (aka MEMS probes) to read and write data in clusters of molecules on the film.

How cool is that?

Now that we can see how we might store an enormous amount of data in an incredibly small format, we just need to figure out a way to move that data around the world faster than a sailboat or a station wagon on the New Jersey turnpike.

Posted at 12:50PM Apr 09, 2007 by Lynn Rohrer in Life's Data  | 

Sunday Mar 04, 2007
Open source, Transparency and Airlines

I was recently stuck in NYC (actually LaGuardia) and in my free time on the standby lists I got to thinking about better ways for airlines to manage passenger lists. I'd sure like to encourage the airlines (particularly United) to borrow a concept from open source communities -- transparency.

If airlines could post their standby list at a kiosk along with the information on how oversold the flight is travelers could make much better decisions about whether to hang around or just come back for a confirmed flight. Another wonderful feature would be online directories of airport hotels and diversions near the airport like movie theaters or malls. I'm sure businesses would be happy to pay for the advertising. I like that... a shuttle from the airport to the nearest mall for movies and shopping (for underwear and other items that were shipped to your destination without you).

 Such a kiosk would have saved me a wasted day at the airport... and provided one more day to explore Manhattan.

Speaking of the island... as a Westerner it was quite an odd experience in downtown and midtown. Man-made canyons with little to no sunlight at the bottom. I was half expecting to run across a box canyon that I couldn't get out of... Another odd sensation was that life existed on several stratas in the big buildings. Street level, business levels up 5-10 stories and who knows what further up in elevation. Another surprise was the compactness of well known features -- Rockefeller Center, Madison Square Gardens, Central Park. They look bigger on film.

So much to do and see though for such a compact area. We had no problem getting around. We tried to walk as much as we could since we also had a fantastic restaurant tour set up by one of our traveling party that included Rosa Mexicana, Rain, Paradou (fantastic French food and jazz), Gramercy Tavern, Bryant Park Grille. Lots of other fun stuff... Spamalot, museums, Westminister dog show, and a great small club concert. I'm looking forward to the next trip to NYC. This time I'll try to avoid the ice storms.

Posted at 09:02PM Mar 04, 2007 by Lynn Rohrer in Life's Data  |