Friday March 07, 2008 I was horrified. The room felt damp and warm. My finger slid through a fine coat of dust settled on a flat surface. What's going on here? It is supposed to be meat-locker cold and air-tight. This is a disaster for a high-density data-center, also known as the system lab.
We built this lab only 4 years ago, with extra air-condition units. It is still state-of-the-art: carefully spaced racks, inert-air fire distinguishing, sound-absorbing wall-covering, swipe-card access control, power management, the works. We are Sun. We knew how to do data-centers.
We did not. We under-estimated the growth curve, electricity consumption, and cooling demand. The lab over-heated near the end of last year and we had an "oh sh*t" moment. The options are all ugly: turn off some machines and lose the services they provide, move them to a different lab and suffer disruption, or add more cooling capacity and deal with the hell of funding request. Then, someone came up with a brilliant and stupid idea: open the windows. It is brilliant that outside Beijing air was below freezing; it provided effective and economic cooling. It is so, so stupid that it defeated inert air fire control and shortened the equipment life-span by exposing them with unfiltered air. It also stops working when spring arrives.
Nevertheless, we had time to plan for a move. As this drama unfolds, Sun's eco messages repeated louder than thunders. We experienced the pain of being cooling-capacity constrained. Had we moved to cool-thread technologies earlier, we would have averted the pain.
A testimony for our own gospel? Sigh..
Please excuse me for my being so contemptuously audacious, but Sun's Beijing team members also should "learn" how to love Solaris more and use Solaris more extensively (including, as a starter, using Solaris/SXDE at home).
We run a law office in Honolulu. We have switched our desktop system to primarily Solaris for almost a year and I personally use both Solaris and OpenSolaris at home. Ironically, the only time we have to take a leave from Solaris (& boot into SuSE) is when we need to input Chinese characters. There is always this--borrowing your own language--"oh sh*t moment" when we forgot how bad our experience has been and thought we should give Solaris one more chance. The problem is particularly acute for inputting traditional Chinese. Nothing can be more pathetic.
I am sure Sun's Beijing team is probably the most qualified on this planet to implement the best & most user-friendly Chinese input method for Solaris. However, if no one's actually using it, no one is going to realize the gravity of the problem. And nothing will get done--& no one else will be using it.
Posted by W. Wayne Liauh on March 07, 2008 at 04:50 PM CST #