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Archive for February, 2008

The Circle of Life(cycle Management)

February 25th, 2008 by John Dragoon

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Earlier today, Novell announced its intention to acquire data center management leader PlateSpin. PlateSpin is a Toronto based technology company who is singularly focused on providing the most advanced software designed to optimize the use of server resources across the enterprise, both in the physical and virtual environment. This is an extremely important and exciting announcement for Novell and our customers on many levels. In this blog I’d like to offer my perspective on how will it impact both Novell’s strategy and our customer’s ability to respond to their every changing business conditions.

As always, the most important perspective is that of the customer so let’s start there.

We’ve talked for quite some time about our customer’s challenges and their constant need to lower cost, complexity and risk. One of the most talked about technologies in recent memory to accomplish this is virtualization. Historically, every time the business user needed a new service the solution was to provision a new physical server with a single application or purpose which is an inherently expensive, rigid and inefficient approach. Virtualization has emerged to offer new efficiencies and represents another powerful tool in the CIO’s arsenal.

But if virtualization has such tremendous promise, why hasn’t it yet reached its full potential. In a word, complexity. Virtual infrastructures must co-exist with new and legacy physical infrastructures, creating a new set of management challenges including cross infrastructure management, security, provisioning and IT chargeback. From the customer’s perspective, solving these challenges requires answers to the following questions:

  • How do you find existing physical workloads that would be better served running in a virtualized environment?
  • How do you find virtualized workloads that are consuming a disproportionate amount of shared resources and should be moved to a physical server?
  • How can you easily assemble and move workloads between physical and virtual infrastructures?
  • How can you manage the entire lifecycle of workloads and ensure sufficient resource capacity to accommodate current and future business needs?
  • How do you deliver the right business services and align IT to the business?
  • How do you allocate IT costs in the shared resource environment that virtualization enables?
  • How do you control and manage growth of the data center when the ease of provisioning virtual machines with no need to purchase new hardware often leads to virtual infrastructure sprawl and management headaches?
  • How do you change process and policies founded on principles of the static, physical-only data center to accommodate the new flexibility of virtualization and the realities of a data center that includes both physical and virtual infrastructure?

Great questions and answering these on behalf of customers is one of the keys to creating a more agile, responsive, flexible and of course cost effective IT infrastructure. Providing these answers in an integrated and enterprise class manner was the catalyst behind our impending PlateSpin acquisition. Together, Novell and PlateSpin will provide the industry’s first solution to help customers manage workloads (data, applications and operating systems) across both physical and virtual infrastructures.

So what exactly is the combined Novell and PlateSpin solution for managing the next generation data center? Fair question. In a nutshell it’s a full solution stack with a powerful virtualization platform and a best-in-class heterogeneous management portfolio. But perhaps a bit more detail is in order.

Prior to this planned acquisition, Novell had a leading open source virtualization platform (SUSE Linux Enterprise with the Xen hypervisor)—a platform from which to run virtualized work. We also have an outstanding management platform to manage physical and virtual resources in heterogeneous IT environments, Novell ZENworks Orchestrator. But we could not complete the full management lifecycle. We had no good way to assess and monitor which workloads were candidates for virtualization nor did we have a solution for the seamless streaming of virtual and physical workloads. Finally, we didn’t have an elegant and affordable solution for disaster recover or protecting workloads in the data center from unplanned outages. Enter PlateSpin. PlateSpin’s PowerRecon, PowerConvert, and Forge products are designed from the ground up to handle those important tasks respectively.

Together we now provide customers a solution for the above and more importantly answers to four fundamental workload lifecycle management categories—relocation, protection, provisioning and optimization.

So what’s the business benefit to all this? What’s in it for the customer?

  • Lower costs: Data centers can lower costs by reducing their reliance on physical infrastructure as well as the costs required to provision, protect, relocate and optimize workloads throughout their life. Because virtual machines are easy to deploy and re-deploy, customers can provision applications and systems dynamically—moving virtual machines from one server to another as needed.
  • Increased flexibility and agility: With heterogeneous virtualization and workload lifecycle management from Novell and PlateSpin, data centers can provision virtual or physical workloads dynamically and automatically on existing hardware to account for changing resource requirements at peak demand times as well as in test lab scenarios.
  • Increase server utilization: In many data centers, server hardware utilization is between 5 and 50 percent. Virtualization can improve hardware utilization and significantly reduce server sprawl in data centers. By allowing multiple applications to coexist on one physical server, virtualization enables more efficient use of resources and increases server utilization.
  • Reduce power consumption: Data center growth typically increases power consumption, floor/rack space requirements and cooling needs. And because energy costs are increasing, computer energy consumption has become a major concern for data centers. With virtualization and consolidation, you can reduce cooling requirements, lower power bills, decrease management demands and lessen the overall carbon footprint and environment impact of your IT operations. A true “green” solution.

So that’s a small view into the customer perspective. What about the impact and relevance to Novell’s strategy? In a word—it’s an excellent fit for a number of reasons.

Our planned PlateSpin acquisition is a key cornerstone of our stated two-pronged strategy of desktop to data center Linux and IT management software. With this acquisition and the addition of the PlateSpin portfolio, we will be uniquely qualified to deliver the next generation infrastructure software needed to power tomorrow’s data center. Indeed, PlateSpin is a key compenent of Novell’s management blueprint that was announced in 2007.

PlateSpin is also an excellent fit because they share our passion and commitment to two important principles—to be Open and Interoperable. PlateSpin’s value proposition is, at its core, to provide solutions that work across multiple operating systems and virtualization platforms. While we are indeed proud of our open source based virtualization platform in SUSE Linux Enterprise, the fact is that there are many other virtual platforms in use today. PlateSpin’s products work well in all these environments. Indeed, with PlateSpin, we’ll continue to promote our leadership in interoperability and in making IT work together.

You’ll here a lot more about this landmark acquisition in the weeks and months ahead. For now we are delighted to welcome PlateSpin’s 200 plus enthusiastic and passionate employees and thousands of customers to the Novell family. We invite all of you to discover what Novell and PlateSpin, working together, can do for your company.

Microsoft Expands Interoperability

February 21st, 2008 by John Dragoon

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Earlier today Microsoft made an announcement on a set of broad-reaching changes to its technology and business practices intended to increase the openness of its products and driver greater interoperability, opportunity and choice across the IT community of developers, partners, customers, and yes competitors. I’ve no doubt much will be written about Microsoft’s “true” intentions and agenda and I’m quite confident some commentary will fall into the category of “no good deed goes unpunished”. Like any announcement, actions will speak louder than words and only time will tell the true value that will accrue to the various stakeholders.

Perhaps not surprisingly, at face value, I’m encouraged and in support of Microsoft’s expanded interoperability as it hits upon two core values that Novell believes in and acts upon: To be Open and Interoperable.

Open and Interoperable aren’t just empty platitudes from Novell. The proof points are numerous and I’ll detail many of them in future blogs. We believe the best way to advance the “Open” agenda is through transparent and factual interoperability. One size doesn’t fit all. Never did. Never will. Accordingly, Novell’s belief is that the open source model in particular and interoperability in general serve the customer’s agenda the best when issues of cost, complexity and risk are top of mind. Today’s announcement by Microsoft on expanded interoperability is a positive step for developers, customers and partners because it expands choice. Could it be bolder and broader? Of course. If the market demands it to be so, it will likely happen. In the meantime, I’m proud that Novell took a bold first step in accelerating the conversation around openess and interoperability with our Microsoft partnership over 15 months ago.

One blogger (an ex Novell employee) in particular used Microsoft’s announcement to play out his tired and often inaccurate “anti-Novell” agenda with a blog titled “Red Hat was right, Novell was wrong” (be sure to check the comments too). In fact, if Mr. Asay didn’t have an anti-Novell agenda, he would have congratulated Novell for its early pioneering of openness and interoperability and for bringing Microsoft to the table on these important issues long before today’s announcement. He claims today’s announcement removes any advantage granted Novell in our partnership agreement. A clear indication he’s not following the substance of what is being delivered on behalf of our mutual customers. For Mr. Asay’s benefit our technical collaboration with Microsoft covers the following six critical areas….none of which the competitors he referenced are delivering (and all of which are consistent with Microsoft’s expanded interoperability announcement today).

  • Virtualization: Support optimized bi-directional virtualization between SUSE Linux Enterprise and Windows Server 2008
  • Standards-based systems management: A common framework for solutions to enable management of mixed environments based on the WS-Management standard
  • Directory and identity intoperability: Directory and identity federation between Microsoft and Novell products
  • Document format compatibility: Enhancing interoperability for Open XML format and ODF documents between Microsoft Office and OpenOffice.org Novell edition.
  • Moonlight: Interoperability between Microsoft’s Silverlight rich-media player and Linux desktops
  • Accessibility: Interoperability between Microsoft and Linux accessibility projects.

As we have said before, Microsoft has been a good partner and has kept their commitments. We still compete aggressively on many fronts and will continue to do so. To the extent Microsoft pursues an agenda of open and interoperable, we are in full support. It’s an agenda we’ve long held and will remain the foundation of our value delivery going forward.

John

Open Collaboration

February 13th, 2008 by John Dragoon

Today we furthered our commitment to secure, reliable and OPEN enterprise collaboration solutions by acquiring SiteScape, a leading provider of team workspace, enterprise social networking and real-time collaboration technology. You may recall that in early 2007, Novell announced an agreement with SiteScape to license their technology for Novell Teaming + Conferencing. As a result of that agreement, SiteScape open sourced its technology, resulting in the ICEcore open source project. This project, to which SiteScape and Novell have been contributors, underpins Novell Teaming + Conferencing and its SiteScape corollary: SiteScape ICEcore Enterprise.

This acquisition is really the next logical step in a partnership that has already yielded significant market interest and the successful launch of Novell Teaming + Conferencing. Additionally, this acquisition delivers further proof of our commitment to delivering innovative and open collaboration solutions. It also increases our ability to offer truly open alternatives for team productivity and real-time conferencing that customers can count on for the long-term. Finally, this acquisition bolsters the foundation on which we will build a strategy for unified communications and collaboration.

While this acquisition is exciting on many levels, I believe it is an outstanding example of two fundamental beliefs and commitments of Novell – namely to be Open and Interoperable.

The SiteScape technology and the Novell Teaming + Conferencing product is based on, and has as its foundation, ICEcore – the open source project (Novell will now assume sponsorship of this important initiative). The solution is “open” in other important ways as well with its ability to support multiple platforms (Linux and Windows) and applications (Novell Groupwise, Lotus Notes and Microsoft Exchange). No other teaming and real time collaboration solution offers these customer benefits and flexibility.

We’re excited to formally welcome the SiteScape family to Novell and we invite you to check out what a truly open and interoperable collaboration solution is all about.

John

Welcome Aboard Zonker!

February 5th, 2008 by John Dragoon

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Today we welcome aboard Joe “Zonker” Brockmeier as openSUSE Community Manager.

By way of quick reminder, the openSUSE project is a worldwide community program sponsored by Novell with the primary mission to promote the use of Linux everywhere. The openSUSE project also forms the base of Novell’s award winning SUSE Linux Enterprise products.

While I’m not sure what the “Zonker” in Joe’s name means, his full name and passion for all things Linux and open source should be familiar to many. Among many other qualifications, Joe was recently Editor-in-Chief, Linux Magazine Media Group. In his many musings you’ll find an objectivity and passion that will serve him, and the openSUSE community, well in his new role. His job description is simple – help accelerate the adoption of Linux. To accomplish this he’ll work tirelessly to promote the contributions of the community and make sure all have the environment and support they need to succeed.

Joe will be reaching out to the many members of the community in the days, weeks and months ahead. In the meantime, you can reach him at zonker@opensuse.org or check out his personal openSUSE blog.

Welcome aboard Joe.

John


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