Cloud is a shift from the focus on underlying technology implementation to leveraging existing implementations and further building upon them. Cloud orchestration or a network of clouds is the wave of the future where these clouds can operate with elasticity, scalability, and efficiency. Effective service management is an important aspect of managing such networks. The transition to the cloud will enable the further aggregation of composite web services and enhanced business-to-business capabili...| By Don MacVittie | Article Rating: |
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| December 22, 2009 04:00 PM EST | Reads: |
3,259 |
Virtualization Magazine on Ulitzer
George Crump over at Storage Switzerland has a pretty good introductory primer to File/NAS Virtualization. George and I haven’t always seen eye-to-eye, but that’s no surprise, I’m one of those people that wants analysts to prove they’re working on solid ground, and he’s an analyst. Both being type A personalities just guarantees that once in a while we’ll get a little sparky. This time though, he’s got a good intro written up, and though he doesn’t come out and mention it, the standalone, heterogeneous solution he talks about as the second type is pretty much what our ARX series products are all about.
The only thing he missed that I think it is imperative to clearly delineate in any storage virtualization solution primer is that NAS/File Virtualization does not suffer from the horrid “my virtualization box went down, how to find my data” problem that SAN virtualization largely failed because of. With File Virtualization you are still saving the file with the name that the user typed in, it just might be on a different NAS or share than the user thinks – you’re masking where, not what. I know that some vendor’s NAS solutions used an indexing scheme that masked what and where, I presume those have all improved or gone the way of the dodo (though I haven’t looked in a while… If I find some when I look over the next few months, I’ll let you know. If I do find any still extant, I’ll leave the ridiculing to others though, since those in the File/NAS virtualization space are our competitors ;-)).
The other thing that made me a throw up a little in the back of my throat was his use of the dread phrase “ILM” (Information Lifecycle Management). I shudder when our marketing organization uses it too. ILM had such a huge hype curve that it was doomed to fail when reality showed that its most useful bits were easier merged into other applications and appliances than implemented as stand-alone solutions. ILM products like dedupe and tiering have survived, but this functionality is also merged into existing products. The reason stand-alone products still live is because they are heterogeneous and offer a more data-center wide strategy than the one NAS box you have doing these functions for itself and ignoring all the other NAS your organization owns.
So I prefer some other terminology for tiering and rule-based movement, both of which the ARX does smashingly well (how smashingly well you ask? Watch this space, I’m working up a series). But in essence the tiering bit being associated with ILM is fair, ILM or HSM is where its roots lie anyway. I just think that as early as 2004 some smart people were pointing to the rebound problem and trying to slow the hype curve before it reached the clouds. Sound familiar? Yeah, it happens a lot – XML, Java, SOA, Cloud… All got their share of over-hype, but most found a home. ILM was a group of related ideas and while large chunks found a home in products like ARX, it did not really survive as a single field of technology. So I don’t use it unless I’m talking about other people’s writing.
The biggest problem I see with File/NAS virtualization is one of education – most people don’t fully understand what they can hope to gain from it. Since I’m doing my bit to educate people on the issues (find a full list of my file virtualization articles on my DevCentral “About the Team” page or by searching for “Don MacVittie Virtualization” on Ulitzer), I’m happy to point to Mr. Crump’s article as a good starting point for those of you who are still trying to figure out why you’d bother implementing File virtualization in your organization.
Meanwhile, I’m cooking up that series, expect to hear more from me in the near future – maybe even an “unboxing” video of an ARX, depending upon how mine is packaged when it comes.
Until then, read on, and enjoy our increasingly virtual world!
Don.
Fun with full disclosure. I’m an employee of F5 Networks, producer of the ARX family of products, file virtualization solutions. If you think that is enough to make me say good things about the product line, I suspect that you don’t know me very well…
(Picture is By Ian Wilson, released via Wikipedia under Creative Commons license.
Published December 22, 2009 Reads 3,259
Copyright © 2009 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
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More Stories By Don MacVittie
Don MacVittie is a Technical Marketing Manager at F5 Networks. In this role, he supports outbound marketing, education, and evangelism efforts around development, storage, and IT management topics related to F5 solutions. His role includes authoring technical materials, participating in social and community-based forums, and providing guidance for the development of marketing resources. As an industry veteran, MacVittie has extensive programming experience along with project management, IT management, and systems/network administration expertise.
Prior to joining F5, MacVittie was a Senior Technology Editor at Network Computing, where he conducted product research and evaluated storage and server systems, as well as development and outsourcing solutions. He has authored numerous articles on a variety of topics aimed at IT professionals. MacVittie holds a B.S. in Computer Science from Northern Michigan University, and an M.S. in Computer Science from Nova Southeastern University.
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The focus of Java EE 7 is on the cloud, and specifically it aims to bring Platform-as-a-Service providers and application developers together so that portable applications can be deployed on any cloud infrastructure and reap all its benefits in terms of scalability, elasticity, multitenancy, etc. The existing specifications in the platform such as JPA, Servlets, EJB, and others will be updated to meet these requirements.
Java EE 7 continues the ease of development push that characterized prior ...
With Cloud Expo 2012 New York (10th Cloud Expo) just four months away, what better time to start introducing you in greater detail to the distinguished individuals in our incredible Speaker Faculty for the technical and strategy sessions at the conference...
We have technical and strategy sessions for you every day from June 11 through June 14 dealing with every nook and cranny of Cloud Computing and Big Data, but what of those who are presenting? Who are they, where do they work, what else h...
Wide and cheap availability of cloud-based media services is upon us. With the transformations these services are already bringing to the consumption of music, video and interactive media, change has likewise come to professional workflows. Documents in 2012 are read, written, collaborated on, and distributed anywhere an Internet-enabled device can reach – which is to say, everywhere.
In his session at the 10th International Cloud Expo, Christopher Kenneally, Director of Business Development a...
I've been working on Enterprise Cloud Strategy and in the course of this work identified some interesting and non-obvious opportunities in the Cloud.
One solution I’ve examined is the well-crafted solution that is enStratus. enStratus has built a SaaS Cloud Management / Governance product focused on providing critical management, monitoring, governance capabilities tailored to the needs of the Global 2000 market, rather than the startup market. As I have worked with a current Fortune 500 clie...
With Cloud Expo 2012 New York (10th Cloud Expo) now under four months away, what better time to start introducing you in greater detail to the distinguished individuals in our incredible Speaker Faculty for the technical and strategy sessions at the conference...
We have technical and strategy sessions for you every day from June 11 through June 14 dealing with every nook and cranny of Cloud Computing and Big Data, but what of those who are presenting? Who are they, where do they work, what e...
"Having been in the IT field for many years, I believe the cloud computing chapter in the industry is an exciting one and I am proud to be a part of it," said National Reconaissance Office (NRO) Chief Information Officer Jill T. Singer Tuesday, as it was announced that she was one of 10 winners of the 2012 CloudNOW "Top Ten Women in Cloud" Awards.
2011 was a year of rapid adoption for public and private cloud services. Instant and on-demand server provisioning was the driving force behind the massive growth. On top, cloud server templates and script automation simplified application installation for simple and pre-defined application stacks, but have not targeted more complex enterprise application environments.
In his session at the 10th International Cloud Expo, John Yung, CEO of Appcara, will discuss how 2012 will be the year for app...
As more enterprises are adopting clouds, the nature of cloud computing is changing. Previously, clouds were used to test applications or for non-mission critical applications. Today, enterprises are using clouds for cost-saving advantages and launching more mission critical applications that have defined performance needs.
In his session at the 10th International Cloud Expo, Eric Shepcaro, CEO and Chairman of the Board of Telx, will discuss how distributed computing has many advantages. It wou...
Is Big Data destined for only the top 3,000 companies worldwide? What about medium or small companies who are equally as data-driven? Is there a place for Big Data in SMB markets? When I talk to SMB companies about their use of public cloud services, it’s a no-brainer. Pay as you go, lower costs up...
Last summer a CIO for a high profile ecommerce company told me that the smartest way to play the cloud was to rent the spike. I just read the same thing from Zynga’s Infrastructure CTO Allan Leinwand in Inside Zynga’s Big Move To Private Cloud by InformationWeek’s Charles Babcock.
We have previously provided a Quickstart guide to standing up Rackspace cloud servers (and have one for Amazon servers as well). These are very low cost ways of building reliable, production ready capabilities for enterprise use (commercial and government).
Israel-based startup Porticor launches this week with technology aimed at giving enterprises a way to encrypt data held in cloud computing services, including those from Amazon and Rackspace.
Porticor Virtual Private Data is focused on protecting data at rest in cloud-based computing centers where ...
If you are running the BIG-IP Edge Client on your iPhone, iPod or iPad, you may have gotten an AppStore alert for an update. If not, I just wanted to let you know that version 1.0.3 of the iOS Edge Client is available at the AppStore.
The main updates in v1.0.3:
URI scheme enhancement allows passi...
Statistics matter, not only in business, but increasingly also in our social life - well, at least in our social media life. Some of the statistics I noticed this week were round numbers, like 1000. With 1000 representing both the number now showing under "followers" in Twitter and the revenue numbe...
Let's face it right now the cloud is pretty immature. The level of automation and management of these environments are analogous to the early assembly lines, but it won't be this way long. This is not the industrial revolution and it moves at a wicked fast pace. Before we know it the next generation...
In previous posts such as Cloud Computing: Hype, Vision or Reality?, Hyped Cloud Technologies, PAAS is not Mainstream yet, SaaS is going Mainstream, Future applications: SaaS or traditional? I discussed Cloud Computing.
Recently I read Joe McKendrick's interesting article titled:Cloud Computing Mar...
Having covered Cloud Foundry, Force.com, Google App Engine and Red Hat OpenShift, we now take a look at Microsoft’s PaaS offering, Windows Azure.
Microsoft Windows Azure Platform is a Platform as a Service offering from Microsoft. It was announced in 2008 and became available in 2010. Since then Mi...









