SANDIA ENTERS INTO AN AGREEMENT PACT WITH RACKWISE DATA CENTER INFRASTRUCTURE MANAGEMENT

An official press release statement by Sandia National Laboratories revealed that Sandia has signed a license agreement with Rackwise Solutions. Rackwise, a leader in data center infrastructure management solutions has agreed to deploy its DCiM X tool in Sandia Labs’ multiple data center facilities. Sandia is a multi-program engineering and science laboratory operated and managed by Sandia Corporation, a wholly owned subsidiary of Lockheed Martin Corporation, for the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration.  Sandia has major R&D responsibilities in national security, energy and environmental technologies and economic competitiveness, supporting numerous federal, state, and local government agencies, as well as private sector companies and organizations.

Phil Kuhlman, Sandia’s infrastructure hardware solution architect said, “We are anxious to have the central view into our data center assets and the power change modeling capabilities that Rackwise DCiM X provides. Prior to implementing the Rackwise toolset, this information was compiled and managed by many different IT staff with no centralized view, and modeling of changes in a standardized way was not possible.”

Guy A. Archbold, Rackwise, Inc. Chief Executive Officer, added, “Sandia National Laboratories is one of our nation’s leading research institutions with a 60 year tradition of contribution to our national defense, energy, climate, and space programs. We are pleased and proud that Sandia has selected our DCiM X offering to monitor, manage, and optimize their information technology infrastructure, clearly a core resource contributing to their critical research and project efforts. In selecting Rackwise DCiM X, Sandia joins other premier U.S. national research institutions including SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory and Argonne National Laboratory in utilizing Rackwise offerings to efficiently and effectively plan, manage, and control their data centers and computing ecosystems to achieve the highest levels of IT operations and cost optimization by assuring reliability, discovering hidden capacity, and enabling efficiencies across their IT landscape. This selection further validates Rackwise offerings as the leading IT infrastructure management tools for individual data centers as well as sophisticated complex local and global data center networks.”

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Rackspace Looks to Go ‘Down Under’

    Top notch cloud provider Rackspace has announced its intention to open a data center in Australia in the next 18 months. This comes as a direct response to Australia’s data protection requirements and customer demand.

Over 2500 companies in Australia and New Zealand, including Rio Tinto and Xero, utilize the storage, and server and platform service offered by Rackspace. Customers from Australia hosting Rackspace are presently served from its data center in Hong Kong.

Chief operating officer Mark Roenigk said that Australian privacy legislation and Rackspace’s lack of an on-shore data center has directed its hosting business towards web hosting rather than ‘e-tailing’. “In some industries there’s data protection requirements by the government there, and some or a lot of that data needs to stay right within Australia,” said Roenigk. “So the businesses we’re doing with Australian customers today are typically things that can be outsourced that sit outside the proprietary information governance there in Australia.  Those customers are really pushing us to open up local operations in Australia. We’re going to do our best to support those Australian customers that want us to host our product in their own country. As you know, we have a sales office in Australia, and we will open a data center in Australia in the next 12 to 18 months.”

Rackspace Asia vice president Jim Fagan told iTnews in November last year that the company’s Australian expansion plans depend on the success of its private cloud implementation and support services.

Mark Roenigk is also a director on the board of the Facebook-initiated Open Compute Project (OPC) Foundation, which aims to design energy-efficient software, servers and data centers from the ground up.

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Bringing Fanatical Support to your Premises

In the past, having a private cloud typically meant you had offsite hardware managed by a host, or a full-time IT team on hand to handle on premise hardware, however thanks to Rackspace companies are now able to have the security of an on-premise private cloud while receiving the industry leading support and guidance of Rackspace Cloud Builders.  By providing customers with the option of utilizing:  Rackspace datacenters, partner datacenters, or most commonly a customer chosen data center, Racksapce is now moving from being a traditional web host to an on-call IT support firm.

While the change from a controlled environment to “real world” setups might sound daunting, an interview with Scott Sanchez, Director of Business Development for Rackspace Cloud Builders, greatly helped to clarify the many questions enterprises and information technology professionals have had about the major initiative from the vendor.

Bringing the Cloud to You

  • Although Open Stack can technically run on a wide array of hardware, to qualify for Rackspace support, your servers  must conform to the specifications at ReferenceArchitecture.org
    • The requirements at Reference Architecture are intended to ensure a reasonably standard environment for Rackspace clients regardless of server location
    • The main objective of Rackspaces’ Open Stack is to provide the same level of support to Rackspace clients regardless of where their servers are located.
      • Rackspace Cloud Builders allows Rackspace to help assemble the necessary hardware on your premises, while also handling management tasks remotely
      • When asked about the transition to supporting both controlled and outside environments rather than just their own data centers, Sanchez said it has not been an issue due to the  publication of standardized required specifications
      • According to Sanchez, although Open Stack can be used by smaller companies looking to test their own private environments, the ideal demographic is larger companies with significant infrastructure investment

Proven Track Record

  • Despite Open Stack only being sixteen months old, it has been adopted by computing giants such as:  Sony and their PS3 Network, PayPals’ X Commerce Platform, and The European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN)
  • Additionally, Open Stack boasts a development network of over 130 participating companies and over 150 developers
  • Interestingly, Sanchez mentioned that many of the major corporate users of Open Stack devote some of their development efforts towards contributing back to the  open stack community as new features are added and improvements are made
  • This model does not just benefit the community at large, but enterprises also benefit since their contributions help shape the project. Additionally it prevents them from being at the mercy of a single company for development direction.

Development Cycle

  • Open Stack operates on a six month development cycle which is based on clearly marked milestones, helping to simplify the logistics of knowing how an update will affect the existing systems
  • Although having a six month deployment cycle has been of concern to many, Sanchez mentioned that with the Diablo release (latest version) of the software, the foundation has become much more solid than the earlier phases
    • Analogous to building a house. It takes awhile for the foundation to solidify before you can begin branching out and adding additional features.
    • In addition to starting with a full deployment, Sanchez mentioned that some companies who are concerned about the early stages of Open Stack simply start with the latest version, but don’t go to production until later versions come out
    • Unlike many Linux distros which have bleeding edge, stable, and legacy version support, Open Stack only maintains their latest editions allowing them to focus on the present rather than having to support various variants of the platform
      • When asked if Rackspace has any plans to adopt a deployment cycle similar to Linux distro’s, Sanchez said there are no plans to change the model as it is already sufficient.

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