Posts in "BigCo"

Things were different back in 2003, but developers still were kingmakers

From Rachel Chalmer’s 2003, coverage of Novell buying “SuSE” (451 client access required): Historically, Novell’s Achilles’ heel has been its inability to keep its independent developer community happy. Some fled NetWare for OS/2, which IBM botched in its turn. Meanwhile, Microsoft was happy to embrace and pamper NetWare and OS/2 burn victims as independent software vendors for Windows. Now developers are asking themselves whether Novell has learned its lesson, or whether it’s about to make the same mistake again.

A $50m super computer for $33k

Amazon today operates at a scale that most people are unaware of and find incomprehensible when they get a glimmer of understanding of it. Just to offer an example, one weekend Cycle Computing used EC2 spot instances to create a 156,000 core supercomputer that spanned 8 AWS regions and provided 1.2 Petaflops of processing power. In its presentation, Cycle noted the tremendous cost savings this offered: $33,000 instead of the $50 million plus it would have cost if the equipment were purchased.

A $50m super computer for $33k

Amazon today operates at a scale that most people are unaware of and find incomprehensible when they get a glimmer of understanding of it. Just to offer an example, one weekend Cycle Computing used EC2 spot instances to create a 156,000 core supercomputer that spanned 8 AWS regions and provided 1.2 Petaflops of processing power. In its presentation, Cycle noted the tremendous cost savings this offered: $33,000 instead of the $50 million plus it would have cost if the equipment were purchased.

A $50m super computer for $33k

Amazon today operates at a scale that most people are unaware of and find incomprehensible when they get a glimmer of understanding of it. Just to offer an example, one weekend Cycle Computing used EC2 spot instances to create a 156,000 core supercomputer that spanned 8 AWS regions and provided 1.2 Petaflops of processing power. In its presentation, Cycle noted the tremendous cost savings this offered: $33,000 instead of the $50 million plus it would have cost if the equipment were purchased.

Cloud is hard

Cloud is really, really hard. Just read the headlines – enterprises and traditional IT vendors are struggling. Cloud is hard

Cloud is hard

Cloud is really, really hard. Just read the headlines – enterprises and traditional IT vendors are struggling. Cloud is hard

Cloud is hard

Cloud is really, really hard. Just read the headlines – enterprises and traditional IT vendors are struggling. Cloud is hard

There's big expectations mis-alignment in OpenStack-land

While this dude’s tone is pretty harsh, there’s not too much wrong here if you peel that back. The issue is one of contextualizing OpenStack. I think a lot of people want it to be a finished, done product. There’s even the sense from some OpenStack die-hards I’ve spoken with over recent years that commercializing at this point is a joke: it’s too early. I don’t think any of them realize that’s what they’re thinking, but when you hear about modularity and customization, it’s a good sign that the person is implying “it’s not fully baked yet” (though not always).

There's big expectations mis-alignment in OpenStack-land

While this dude’s tone is pretty harsh, there’s not too much wrong here if you peel that back. The issue is one of contextualizing OpenStack. I think a lot of people want it to be a finished, done product. There’s even the sense from some OpenStack die-hards I’ve spoken with over recent years that commercializing at this point is a joke: it’s too early. I don’t think any of them realize that’s what they’re thinking, but when you hear about modularity and customization, it’s a good sign that the person is implying “it’s not fully baked yet” (though not always).

There's big expectations mis-alignment in OpenStack-land

While this dude’s tone is pretty harsh, there’s not too much wrong here if you peel that back. The issue is one of contextualizing OpenStack. I think a lot of people want it to be a finished, done product. There’s even the sense from some OpenStack die-hards I’ve spoken with over recent years that commercializing at this point is a joke: it’s too early. I don’t think any of them realize that’s what they’re thinking, but when you hear about modularity and customization, it’s a good sign that the person is implying “it’s not fully baked yet” (though not always).