Broadband Developments

January 27, 2009

Infrastructure 2.0: The Modernization of the Datacenter - Doug Gourlay of Cisco

I cornered Doug Gourlay Senior Director of Product Marketing of Cisco’s Datacenter Business Unit, at the Infrastructure 2.0 event to answer my question about what he means when he says “The Modernization of the Datacenter”.

Question (John Furrier): What do you say to all the skeptics who say that you’re promoting the modernization of the datacenter because you’re in that business and that it really isn’t a problem? Is this just virtualization or is there another issue?

Answer (Doug Gourlay): It’s absolutely a systems approach. There are multiple factors. Lets take Moore’s law for instance which has proven true over the past 30 years. In datacenters you want it to last at least 10 -15 yrs. With 750x processor improvements under Moore’s law in the last 12 years yet cooling efficiencies has only grown 64x for IT assets - that is an 11 or 12x disparity. That’s why you see datacenters with racks designed to cool 4000 to 6000 watts. If I took a set of blades today I would need to cool it with only 30,000 watts. The reality is that we can draw more power then we can efficiently cool today. You either run out of space so — we made denser equipment; you ran out of cooling capacity — you bought more crack units; you ran out of power and the power company will NOT give you more. So when we talk about a modernization were talking about the underlying physical facilities that we built are being obsoleted almost every 5 yrs.

Question (John Furrier): It’s not just a Cisco issue it’s more of an environmental issue around the datacenter themselves ..the raw infrastructure the physical plant or whatever to equipment.

Answer (Doug Gourlay): That’s the biggest compelling event. how do i enable the IT infrastructure to make that facility infrastructure last longer.

To View the Entire Infrastructure 2.0 video feed click here (sorry registration required).

January 16, 2009

Infrastructure 2.0 - Infoblox Introduces Resilient Core Network Services to Cisco Branch Office Solutions

Filed under: BroadDev, Infrastructure 2.0, Networking — Tags: , , , , — John Furrier @ 11:31 am

Here is the press release from the Infoblox and Cisco event that I went to yesterday. I got some good video from Cisco on their ‘moving up the stack’ views and what ‘modernize your datacenter means’.. Doug Gourley was on the panel and I had a chance to talk to him after. I was impressed with Cisco guys Doug Gourley and Omar Sultan both are active bloggers at Cisco. I was impressed with their social outreach on doing some collaborative blogging together. I’ll have that video up tomorrow.

Meanwhile here’s the text from the Edge DNS solutions from Cisco that now includes Infoblox. In essence reduces the amount of hardware at the branch.. very ‘green’ solution since reduction of equipment and power are big focuses right now in enterprise infrastructure.

SANTA CLARA, CA–(MARKET WIRE)–Jan 15, 2009 — Infoblox Inc., a global leader in appliance-based platforms for highly secure, manageable and robust core network services — including domain name resolution (DNS), IP address assignment (DHCP), and IP address management (IPAM) — announced today in a live video web cast “Unleashing the Power of Dynamic Infrastructure” event that its virtual software module is now available on the Cisco Application Extension Platform (AXP) for the Cisco Integrated Services Router (ISR).

Now, enterprises can take advantage of Infoblox’s core network services, offering powerful, cost-effective and highly reliable and manageable DNS, DHCP and IPAM services on the Cisco ISR. The solution is ideal for highly distributed organizations, such as retail, healthcare and manufacturing verticals with multiple branch offices and a critical requirement for local survivability and automation of core network services at those sites.

“For robust delivery and management of core network services at the branch office, companies that have already standardized on Cisco’s ISR for branch routing can easily add Infoblox’s virtual software to the system,” said Jon Oltsik, Senior Analyst, Enterprise Strategy Group. “This can be especially prudent for organizations that consider local survivability and automation at the branch a high priority, but are strapped with requirements to reduce footprint, and operational and administrative costs.”

Further, highly reliable and automated core network services provide the essential foundation for the transition from a static network — configured largely by hand and tracked with spreadsheets — to an intelligent and dynamic infrastructure, which can automatically, fluidly and seamlessly adjust to movement of users and servers. This is critical to support advance applications like virtualization and cloud computing at the data center and branch offices.

“Driven by new system and endpoint demands as well as new IT initiatives like cloud computing and virtualization, network infrastructure will need to meet new automation and intelligence requirements,” said Infoblox Vice President of Marketing Richard Kagan. “Infoblox’s robust core network services platform in conjunction with the Cisco ISR, which provides an excellent combination of resiliency, management automation and flexibility, can provide organizations the dynamic infrastructure necessary to support their new system, end point and IT initiatives.”

“Integrating Infoblox’s technology into Cisco Integrated Services Routers can provide local survivability of essential services like DNS, DHCP and IPAM at the branch office, reduce footprint and operational costs, while optimizing the network for greater visibility and control,” said Rahul Tripathi, Director, Cisco Access Routing Technology Group. “In teaming with Infoblox, customers with millions of Cisco ISRs are provided with intelligent core network services that will help drive their transition to an even more automated and dynamic branch office offering.”
Availability

Infoblox virtual software for the Cisco ISRs is currently available from Infoblox’s global network of channel partners.

Cisco and Infoblox will showcase the joint solution at several upcoming industry events:

– “Unleashing the Power of Dynamic Infrastructure in the Data Center
and Beyond” - a live virtual meeting Thursday, Jan. 15, 2009,
featuring Cisco Senior Director Doug Gourlay, Cisco Director,
Rahul Tripathi and Infoblox CTO Stuart Bailey; to register, visit:
http://www.infoblox.com/news/event-detail.cfm?eventID=84.
– Cisco Networkers - Infoblox and Cisco are demonstrating the solution
in booth #E16 at the Cisco Networkers, January 26-29, Barcelona,
Spain; for more information, or to arrange an appointment, visit:
http://www.infoblox.com/news/events.cfm.

About Infoblox Appliances and Grid Technology

Infoblox pioneered core network services appliances and delivered a number of industry firsts, including the first appliances to integrate DNS, DHCP, and IPAM, TFTP/FTP/HTTP file delivery, NTP, and other services in hardened, easy-to-manage network appliances.

Infoblox grids link a group of member appliances into a unified, centrally managed system with unique resilience and automation functions. For example, the software for all appliances in a grid can be updated in a single operation. Parameters for DNS, DHCP, and all network services can be set at a grid-wide level. Data from all members and services can be viewed and managed from a single location. Additionally, advanced functionality, such as automated failover to and from disaster recovery sites, is built in.

For more information about Infoblox products, visit: http://www.infoblox.com/products/.

About Infoblox

Infoblox delivers highly reliable and manageable platforms for core network services like domain name resolution (DNS), IP address assignment (DHCP), IP address management (IPAM) and more. Infoblox solutions — essential for the move from static networks to dynamic infrastructure and applications — are used by over 2,700 organizations worldwide, including over 100 of the Fortune 500. The company is headquartered in Santa Clara, Calif., and operates in more than 30 countries.
Contact:

Media Contacts:
Jennifer Jasper
Infoblox
408.625.4309
Email Contact

January 15, 2009

John Chambers Opinion On Broadband - The Broadband Economy

Filed under: BroadDev, Infrastructure 2.0 — Tags: , , , — John Furrier @ 1:46 pm

Here is an opinion piece written by John Chambers CEO of Cisco.  Talk about a vision for Broadband no better to post on Broadband Developments.

President-elect Barack Obama’s ambitious economic recovery plan has a goal to create 3 million American jobs in the next two years. Broadband is a part of the answer.

Broadband has the potential to transform our country. It will create jobs in the growth sectors of our economy — jobs that are driving the collaboration and interaction economy. Obama deserves our full support as he looks to revitalize our economy. An economic stimulus package that focuses on infrastructure must put America’s broadband infrastructure at the head of the list. We have the opportunity to bring broadband to those who do not have access to it today and to dramatically improve the quality and speed of existing broadband to 21st century standards. Broadband is the highway to our future.

Obama understands the correlation between broadband and job growth and will be the first U.S. leader to execute a nationwide broadband plan that will spur innovation, productivity, growth and collaboration for generations to come.

He has discussed using the proposed stimulus package to rebuild our aging physical infrastructure of roads, bridges, water and energy systems. This is important and needed. If we want a new 21st century economy and society, he also recognizes that broadband connectivity is the additional infrastructure that is essential to our future.

Broadband’s economic power derives from two sources. The first is reach — how many people are using broadband at work, at home and in the community. The second is speed — the speeds of the connection determine the impact it has on user behavior. We are all aware of how little things have changed over the years when it comes to broadband rankings for the United States. We continue to fall behind.In 2002, TechNet, a group of technology executives that I co-founded with John Doerr and Jim Barksdale, called for 100 Mbs broadband adoption in 100 million American homes and small businesses by 2010. We are clearly not going to reach that goal, but the leadership from government that we asked for seven years ago still applies. We need to upgrade existing infrastructure to 20/50/100 Mbs and there should be tax credits provided to do this. And to prevent the disparity between the technical haves and have-nots from widening, we need funding to promote and provide broadband in unserved and underserved areas.

Including broadband in a stimulus package is not just about the longer-term vision — it will immediately create jobs, with the Communications Workers of America estimating that 97,500 jobs result from every $5 billion spent on broadband infrastructure. Longer term, an increase in broadband usage in the United States of 10 percent would add more than 2 million jobs, according to the group Connected Nation. And in California alone, increasing broadband usage could add 1.8 million jobs over the next 10 years, according to the Sacramento Regional Research Institute.

But it is more than a mere connection. Behavior is dictated by Internet speeds.

Imagine what the United States could accomplish if our broadband speeds were not just competitive, but leading-edge. Imagine what broadband could do for health care: A medical specialist in Cleveland, Ohio, could do a virtual house call via high-definition video to a homebound retiree in Henderson, Nev. We have the technology now, but we need the connectivity. Imagine applying that same technology to education and changing the very nature of the way students learn — or the way we train workers.

Our economic challenges are too dire to merely rely on Band-Aids. It’s time to broadband our economy. The innovation, the productivity and the growth that is possible with a proper broadband infrastructure is nearly limitless. The time to act is now. Doing so will not only help stabilize and stimulate a recovery but create the foundation for long-term prosperity and competitiveness.

January 11, 2009

Cisco Infoblox Live Event Next Week

Filed under: Infrastructure 2.0 — John Furrier @ 1:01 pm

I will be blogging this Infoblox event this coming week its a discussion around the Cloud Computing and Dynamic Infrastructure or Infrastructure 2.0.  Here is Cisco blog post talking about the upcoming Cisco event with Infoblox.

If you’re interested in attending click on this link.

The core network services (DNS, DHCP, RADIUS, TFTP, etc.) that are the foundation for branch office networks carrying data, voice, and video services on a converged network can now be viewed and managed in real-time from a single console, with powerful IP address management (IPAM), logging and reporting.

January 7, 2009

Will The Clouds Part For Some SUN - Q-Layer Might Be An Answer

Filed under: BroadDev, Infrastructure 2.0, virtualization — Tags: , , — John Furrier @ 10:06 am

Sun Microsystems, Inc. (NASDAQ: JAVA) today announced it has acquired Q-layer, a cloud computing company that automates the deployment and management of both public and private clouds. The Q-layer organization, based in Belgium, will become part of Sun’s Cloud Computing business unit which develops and integrates cloud computing technologies, architectures and services.

This is an interesting announcement because cloud computing is very “cloudy” in that it’s very ‘hot’ right now but there are some major security and reliabiity issues with cloud computing.  Just this week Amazon crashed my server on a project and we lost all of our code - we have backup but the hassle factor is high.  Cloud Computing is not ready for primetime so I’m interested in finding out how this annoucement might cause some “needed” SUN to shine in this cloud computing area.

Here is more info on the SUN acquisition.  The Q-layer technology simplifies cloud management and allows users to quickly provision and deploy applications, a key component in Sun’s strategy to enable building public and private clouds. As businesses continue to rely more on technology to drive mission-critical processes, the agility of the datacenter determines the flexibility of the entire company. The Q-layer software supports instant provisioning of services such as servers, storage, bandwidth and applications, enabling users to scale their own environments to meet their specific requirements.

“Sun’s open, network-centric approach coupled with optimized systems, software and services provides the critical building blocks for private and public cloud offerings,” said David Douglas, senior vice president of Cloud Computing and chief sustainability officer, Sun Microsystems. “Q-layer’s technology and expertise will enhance Sun’s offerings, simplifying cloud management and speeding application deployment.”

Cloud computing brings compute and data resources onto the Web and offers higher efficiency, massive scalability and faster and easier software development. Sun is an ideal advisor and partner for companies that want to build cloud computing facilities within their organizations, and for companies and service providers that want to build publicly available cloud computing services. Sun has the open technology, expertise and vision to help companies build, run and use their own clouds. For more information on Sun’s cloud computing strategy, please visit: http://sun.com/cloud.

The terms of the deal were not disclosed as the transaction is not material to Sun.

January 6, 2009

Cisco Gets Hip With Infrastructure 2.0 - Hey’s It’s The Dynamic Enterprise

Filed under: BroadDev, Infrastructure 2.0 — Tags: , , — John Furrier @ 4:15 pm

Cisco has a great blog post about their 2009 predictions and it’s very upbeat. Although Cisco is aiming to be a household brand, they are the 800 pound gorilla position in the enterprise.

Ethernet and IP are remarkably resilient technologies and they can both take a lot of abuse, but there enough concurrent pressures in the data center right now (i.e. operational complexity, scaling, virtualization, power/cooling) that attention is shifting back to infrastructure.  As Jon Oltsik recently pointed out “…these core services have been a virtually ignored kludge leading to unplanned downtime, security vulnerabilities, and manual operations…”

Gregory Ness lays out why virtualized, dynamic infrastructure, such as Data Center 3.0 will continue to to see targeted investment in a recent post:

Network vendors who continue to focus on static infrastructure “speeds and feeds” and CIOs who embrace a dying status quo of networking manual labor empires will be replaced by more innovative and strategic approaches that embrace automation as much internally (within the network) as they deliver externally (systems and operations). Networking pros will be thusly rewarded for embracing policy tools versus reactionary configuration as ad hoc policy in response to higher rates of change within increasing complex networks.

The folks that are running out of something (budget, space, people, power, cooling) will move towards dynamic infrastructure out of necessity–its the only sustainable way they can support the needs of their business.  The second scenario are the folks that adopt dynamic infrastructure out of choice–they see the fluidity of the infrastructure as an advantage–furthermore the TCO reduction either allows them to invest in other places or return money back to the company–both of which will give companies competitive advantage and turn their CIOs into rock stars.

DNS Gurus Talk on Their New Podcast - “Ask Mr. DNS”

Filed under: BroadDev, Infrastructure 2.0, Podcasts — Tags: , , , — John Furrier @ 10:36 am

I just ran into this podcasts from the two gurus of DNS - Matt Larson and Cricket Liu.

For all you DNS junkies you’ll love this content from two old school DNS players.

Ask Mr. DNS Podcast

January 4, 2009

Dynamic Infrastructure: Infrastructure 2.0 Developing In The Enterprise

Filed under: BroadDev, Infrastructure 2.0 — Tags: , , , , — John Furrier @ 11:11 am

Greg Ness wrote a post over at Seeking Alpha on Infrastructure 2.0 or Dynamic Enterprise.

Over the last three decades the network has grown to a point of exhaustion for many enterprises, with critical projects being slowed by the demands of manual IT labor, from core network services like DNS/DHCP and IPAM (IP address management) to the new dynamic processing power potentials unleashed by virtualization and cloud computing. A report last fall by Computerworld showed large enterprises already experiencing diseconomies of scale (rising per unit IP address management costs as IP addresses are added), before even more endpoint and system movement and change is enabled by new initiatives designed to reduce costs and increase efficiency.

When you combine rising (manual labor) costs on a per IP address basis with the ongoing expansion of the network (more IP addresses) within the context of a global recession you have the makings of a wake up call for vendors and CIOs: a wake up call driven by rising operations expenses, increasing outages and fixed or even declining budgets as networks become more operationally significant.

Those who embrace the power of automation will crowd out those who fail to see the implications of new demands.

As the Infrastructure 2.0 meme spreads, there are four companies that are destined to lead: Cisco, F5 Networks, Microsoft (MSFT) and Infoblox (my employer). Within a couple weeks Cisco and Infoblox will share a stage at the San Jose Fairmont to talk about the biggest revolution in networking since TCP/IP. In a few months Cisco, F5 and Infoblox will address FIRE attendees on the dynamic infrastructure revolution. I mention Microsoft because it is the leader in endpoint operating systems and has been very vocal about its virtualization and cloud solutions.

Dynamic infrastructure will unleash new potentials in the network, from connectivity intelligence (dynamic links and reporting between networks, endpoints and applications) to the rise of IT automation on a scale that few have anticipated. It will unleash new consolidation potentials for virtualized data centers and various forms of cloud computing. It will enable networks to ultimately keep up with increasing change velocities and complexity without a concomitant rise in network management expenses and manual labor risks.

Further down the road there will be even more capabilities emerging from Infrastructure 2.0 as virtualization and cloud payoffs put more pressure on brittle Infrastructure 1.0 networks.

As networking vendors fight against stable or even declining enterprise IT budgets the automation of otherwise mundane, manual tasks that are driving up the expense of the network will stand out as the critical chasm between extinction and ongoing growth. The larger the payoff promised by dynamic systems and endpoints the greater the pressure on static networks managed by kludge and CIO shell games.

For static network hardware vendors, enterprises will simply stop upgrading their networks at their former pace because they won’t have the operations budgets to properly administer the new gear. And those CIO buyers will be squeezed by increasingly eroding business cases for their strategic network projects as peer companies continue to evolve and exploit the power of new initiatives. They will experience new initiative diseconomies as they throw more bodies at more changes and outages.

This “dynamic or dead” scenario will start with core network service automation, as Oltsik predicted and will enable breakthroughs in other areas, including IF-MAP and Service-Oriented Network Architecture (SONA ala Cisco) and Data Center 3.0. This is just the beginning.

December 30, 2008

Technology Predictions 2009

Filed under: BroadDev, Comedy, Infrastructure 2.0, Networking — Tags: , , , , , , , , — John Casaretto @ 7:14 pm

Efraim Schwartz over at ComputerWorld reported back in July the results of various studies that indicate that IT jobs will drop in 2009.  Contractors, projects, overall spending down.  The news is dire: “Almost no investment in cloud computing”.

Well, I don’t have any studies to refer to just gut predictions.
Like that old sly cop with the corduroy jacket on your favorite TV show, I got some hunches.

Shining up my crystal ball:

http://www.wearebsm.com/managed_objects/crystal_ball2_bmwPreview.jpg

YES…….
Economy is kinda clouding things up, but yes, a few things seem clear..

  1. Yahoo – Microsoft will scoop them up
  2. Windows 7 – Unfortunately for Microsoft, this will probably dud, too many factors against it.
  3. Ipod Touch Tablet – An internet-capable touch screen tablet –March or June
  4. Chrome 2 – will run on cell platform and desktop, instant browser sync
  5. Digg – Google property
  6. Giants win the Super Bowl – not a tech prediction-that just popped in there.

Again, 1-5 are based on nothing but hunches here people.  #6 is something else entirely.  (We make no claims to the validity of any of these predictions, however)

Side note – Gizmodo posted this rumor about Steve Jobs on their website.  Nothing that wasn’t said before, but there are alleged reliable sources here.  Jobs is the Walt Disney of Computing™, let’s hope this rumor is not true.  Long live Jobs and I will take one of those Touch Tablets please…

Have a good 2009..

Top Stories of 2008

Filed under: BroadDev, Infrastructure 2.0, Networking, Security — Tags: , , , , , , , , — John Casaretto @ 6:33 pm

Yeah, Everyone does these.  Top 10 – etc.

I thought about it.  Techmeme did a nice job of the biggest stories.  Thanks end the end-of-year read.   So, I’ll analyze it.

  1. The Yahoo-Microsoft Story – Yeah this had to be the story of the year.  Microsoft overbids it turns out for Yahoo.  Yahoo plays hard-to-get.  Yahoo cozies up to Google.  That doesn’t turn out so well.  Yahoo is worth a fraction of what Microsoft bid for it.  This one is not over by a long shot.
  2. Apple Announces last year at MacWorld – The fanboys will be onboard anyway and this was their event.  (FYI – I carry an iPhone)  Apple has plenty of press nowadays, this is not much of a big deal.
  3. Google Chrome – So far it has been ho-hum.  There was a big splash, some people tried it, but this is not a world changer as it turns out.  (FYI- it’s my second browser and I love it)
  4. Apple Developer Connection – The App Store is the single greatest thing about the iPhone.
  5. Google Spoken iPhone App – Cool and wow.  I like the sound of that and it sums up that app nicely.  It really does work well.  Now is this a story of the year?  Um.  It could lead to lots of exciting things, but to me, not really a story of the year.
  6. Google/Valve buy – an interesting rumor that didn’t come true.  Google with all that money, all that cash and everyone talking about what to buy.  Kinda funny isn’t it?
  7. RIAA Music lawsuits – Dropping the lawsuits against Grandma Jones, it means little as I expect the RIAA to increase the pressure on the internet providers.
  8. Google>Microsoft> Digg – Once again see Comment for #6
  9. Windows 7 – Reports are saying its a glossy version of Vista.  I think the timing of this OS may be unfortunate for Microsoft – with the economy stumbling and tech/personal spending in a crunch.  If Windows 7 is not a game changer, then this baby may thud.
  10. iPhone 3G – This was a story that deserved to be way higher on the list.  Apple finally put it all together and delivered again a “game changer”.

Wasn’t there an Olympics or something?  What about LinkedIn?  I’ve been on that for maybe 2/3 years now, but it seems to really have blown up now.  Facebook anyone?  Twitter?  Not really news, but their influence and presence has grown..

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