by Matt Brown on August 31, 2017, 5:45 pm EDT #DellEMC 's #CloudClientComputing division is forging a tighter bond with #VMware and putting significant marketing muscle behind an effort to get partners to sell across the IT conglomerate's entire portfolio. The cloud client division's new #VDI Complete Solutions are designed to make app virtualization easier, and more predictable and to give the channel new opportunities in the virtualized desktop space, said division vice president Jeff McNaught. "The VDI Complete partner sells hyper-converged appliances, VMware software, as well as thin clients and PCs. It prevents other partners from coming in and selling individual pieces, and you can do it at a customer location or at your own location," McNaught said.  "The channel can have entirely new conversations with customers who may have wanted this technology but have held off in the past," he said. "The channel completely participates in all opportunities." Todd Knapp, CEO of Envision Technology Advisors, a Pawtucket, R.I.-based solution provider that works with Dell EMC, and VMware said his company is already in talks with several customers about VDI Complete. Having all the necessary ingredients for a full deployment in a single vendor means VDI is poised to finally realize its full potential, he said. "One of the complaints I have always had was that hardware vendors, VMware and service platform vendors were all silos," Knapp said. "Storage, compute and virtualization was all its own thing. It can only benefit all of us to have it come together. The hyper-converged infrastructure story happened because all these things needed to come together under one umbrella," Knapp said. "VDI Complete provides a single SKU and a vendor-approved architecture, It's the solution to a very obvious problem. It only took one of the largest acquisitions in the history of IT to make it a reality. Dell has really beefed up their cloud client computing team, and they've done a really awesome job of SKUs-ing this up, far better than other vendors." Related: Dell EMC Channel Chief Byrne: New VMware Enterprise Licensing Engagement Model Puts An End To Channel 'Conflict' "VDI adoption has been a single-digit growth proposition," Knapp said. "The perception was that it was expensive and complex to architect. To be able to go into the market and say, 'Forget what you've heard. Forget about vendors pointing fingers at each other. This is all one SKU – one point of support.'" "We have the opportunity to see a significant acceleration of adoption, especially in the midmarket -- and low end of the midmarket -- where adoption has been in low single digits." McNaught said his division is now dedicating nearly all of its marketing activity to leads that "go straight to the channel." "It's been a major objective since the middle of 2012 to be the easiest company to work with through the channel to plan, deploy and run VDI," McNaught said. "We're building up our marketing people, the right programs, the right rebates, the right incentives. We have a new dedicated sales team to work with VDI integrators. This is a continuation of the relationship with VMware to build out VDI solutions with new benefits for customers, improved performance, scalability and making the cost much more predictable." The VDI Complete portfolio was rolled out by Dell EMC this week at VMworld in Las Vegas and it includes several VMware Horizon-based VDI options that can be had for between $11 and $36 per user. These can be built as validated solutions on Dell EMC vSAN Ready Nodes or bought as turnkey solutions on Dell EMC VxRail hyper-converged appliances. They can be bought outright, or on a consumption-based plan through Dell Financial Services. The portfolio also includes new applications options, also based on VMware Horizon app virtualization, vSAN ReadyNodes and VxRail, that range in price from $7 per user to $13 per user and a new Dell Latitude 5280 mobile thin client. The VDI solutions are arranged in four categories: The Starter solution is aimed at the SMB space or for proof-of-concept work. The Essentials solution is intended for general desktop and app virtualization for up to 600 users, and is based on a four-node cluster. The Expanded solution is for higher-performance use cases and for up to about 800 users. The Horizon with Graphics solution gives users everything in the Essentials solution and adds graphics capabilities courtesy of Nvidia M10 or M60 graphics cards. Donald Weaver, president of Fredericksburg, Texas-based solution provider Weaver Technologies, said he expects the new solutions to accelerate his company's already rapid VDI growth. "VMware is on the right path to make things easier for our customers whether they are on thin client or a traditional PC with Horizon apps," Weaver said. "We've already seen tremendous growth in the VDI space with vSAN ReadyNodes and VxRail, so continued growth in capabilities and options is good for our customers and good for us."
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Thursday, August 31, 2017
Why it may be time for Amazon to seriously consider spinning off Amazon Web Services
#AmazonWebServices is arguably #Amazon ’s second-greatest creation, after the construction of a retail empire that has done so much to influence the way just about everything is bought and sold. But if the parent is holding back the child, it’s time to let go. First it was Walmart, then Target: Amazon’s retailing rivals, having squandered years dismissing the impact the company would have on their businesses, have come out swinging in 2017. They’re fighting the fire by cutting off Amazon’s oxygen, reportedly pulling their cloud computing business from AWS and encouraging their suppliers to do business with other cloud providers.
https://www.geekwire.com/2017/may-time-amazon-seriously-consider-spinning-off-amazon-web-services/
Intent-Based Networking And Why You Should Care
There is a lot of buzz these days around #intentbased or #drivennetworking: a “smart” topology that possesses the capability to monitor overall network performance, identify issues, and solve problems automatically without manual intervention. The question is, is it real or just a pie-in-the sky reference architecture that is years away from being comlete?
Intent-based networking
There is a lot of buzz these days around intent-based or driven networking: a “smart” topology that possesses the capability to monitor overall network performance, identify issues, and solve problems automatically without manual intervention. The question is, is it real or just a pie-in-the sky reference architecture that is years away from reality?
What are the benefits?
Intent-based networking promises to bring many benefits to organizations of all sizes. All IT administrators want better access control, massive scalability, security and multi-vendor device management. The latter consideration is the most compelling in my mind—the ability to manage hundreds to thousands of heterogeneous devices on a network as an aggregate, and do so with speed, automation and simplicity.
Is intent-based networking a rehash of software defined networking?
As I discussed in a previous article, software defined networking or SDN is a series of network objects (switches, routers, firewalls) all deployed in a highly-automated manner. Intent-based networking leverages the capabilities of SDN but marries it to intelligence. There are a dozen or so companies that are focused on intent-based networking solutions today, and I’ve spent time with executives at three to learn more about their vision for the platform
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Pure Storage - Still Far From Getting The Respect It Deserves
#PureStorage reported the results of its fiscal Q2 last week. The results were a convincing snap-back from the relatively muted results of Q1. The company achieved stronger than expected revenues, gross margins, and EPS, and came close to cash flow break-even. The company is seeing excellent early results for its newest product family and is starting to achieve material success with offerings as part of its Cisco partnership. The company appointed a new CEO, Charles Giancarlo, who has a wealth of experience at a prominent venture capital firm and at Cisco. Pure - Just how good was that quarter Late last week, Pure Storage (PSTG) reported the results of its fiscal Q2. The results were significantly above the company's prior forecast, and the company raised guidance as well. One veteran analyst wrote a curious note to the effect that investors should take a fresh look at the company. The problem, at least for this observer, is that his research note kept a hold rating on the shares with a $15 price target - why take a fresh look when the shares closed at $14.25? Hard to understand that type of logic. The company now has a new CEO who has enjoyed a long and successful career with stints at Cisco (NASDAQ:CSCO) and at Silver Lake Partners, a well-respected VC firm. Pure has been one of the leaders in flash for some time now, and its results simply affirm that it is achieving consistent success in the space. The quarter also contained positive news with regards to the market penetration of FlashBlade, a key product initiative. I too think investors who have not done so might do well to take a look at the shares of Pure. The only difference between me and the analyst at Barclays is that I believe investors should take a look at Pure with a view toward owning the shares. Even in the wake of the share price spike last Friday, the company's valuation remains attractive, and more so in that, the increase in guidance was actually greater than the increase in share price. The headline results were as follows: The company had quarterly revenues of $225 million, 3% higher than the mid-point of prior guidance. The sequential growth in revenues was 23%. The company had GAAP gross margins of 66% compared to 65% the prior quarter. The company's quarterly GAAP operating margin was (29%), a 600-basis point improvement compared to the prior quarter and an 800 point improvement compared to the prior year. The company is forecasting sequential revenue growth of 20% this quarter and a further sequential revenue growth 21% in its fiscal Q4. If the forecast is realized, Q4 revenues will be up 44% from those reported in the prior year's comparable quarter. That might suggest to many that the current First Call consensus forecast that shows growth of 30% in the next fiscal year is significantly understated. The company had 350 new name accounts last quarter up from 300 in fiscal Q1 and comparable to the number of new name accounts closed in the prior year. Pure's go-to market strategy is very much land and expand, and the number of new name accounts is a key indicator in forecasting the company's forward growth. A large cohort of revenues comes from users who buy more from Pure after their initial installation is successfully deployed.
https://seekingalpha.com/article/4102967-pure-storage-still-far-getting-respect-deserves
Global Hypervisor Market 2017 – Citrix, Microsoft, Red Hat, VMware (Dell Technologies)
The Report entitled Global #Hypervisor Market 2017 analyses the crucial factors of the Hypervisor market based on present industry situations, market demands, business strategies adopted by Hypervisor market players and their growth scenario. This report isolates the Hypervisor market based on the key players, Type, Application and Regions. The Hypervisor industry research report mainly focuses on Hypervisor industry in global market. The major regions which contribute to the development of Hypervisor market mainly cover Hypervisor market in North America, Hypervisor market in the United States, Hypervisor market in Europe, Hypervisor market in China and Japan. For More Information Visit Here: Global Hypervisor Market 2017 Hypervisor Market 2017: Leading Players and Manufacturers Analysis 1 #Citrix 2 #Microsoft 3 #RedHat 4 #VMware ( #DellTechnologies)
http://dailycommercenews.com/2017/08/31/global-hypervisor-market-2017/
Why Dell EMC’s Chad Sakac No Longer Gets in Bar Fights About HCI and SDS
LAS VEGAS — #Hyperconverged infrastructure ( #HCI ) and #softwaredefinedstorage ( #SDS ) are arguably the hottest trends in data center modernization. IDC puts HCI at a $6 billion opportunity by 2020 — it’s the fastest growing segment in the data center space — and consistently ranks #DellEMC as a leading vendor in both HCI and SDS.
Both trends are on display at #VMworld2017 this week, and on Monday #DellEMC unveiled its latest HCI systems integrated with #VMware software. Parent company #DellTechnologies owns both companies.
SDxCentral Senior Editor Jessica Lyons Hardcastle caught up with Chad Sakac, president of the converged platforms and solutions division at Dell EMC at VMworld to talk all things HCI. The following interview has been lightly edited for clarity.
VMware is deeply integrated with some of your HCI systems, but you also partner with Nutanix. Will you give me the rundown on Dell EMC’s HCI appliances and rack-scale systems?
Sakac: Basically there are only two questions we need to ask customers to figure out what the right system for them is. The first question is: have you standardized on VMware, and are you aligned with VMware and their roadmap? If the answer to that is yes, then our answer is either VxRail or VxRack SDDC. If they say, ‘No, we may use VMware but VMware is one thing of many, and it’s not a central part of how we look at infrastructure,’ then we have two answers: XC and Flex.
That first question can be visualized as some customers have a preference for infrastructure that is vertically integrated and some customers have a preference for infrastructure that is horizontal and supports all sorts of different stuff.
The word that signifies the value of the vertically integrated stack is simple. It is the most simple way to design an HCI system.
The word for a horizontal stack is flexible. They are never as simple. You have to think about how do I update this thing? And then how do I update VMware? How do I update Linux? It could be any of the things that are on it.
The second question is: are you ready to transform your network? Or are you just ready to transform your storage? If the answer is: ‘I’m not yet ready to transform my network with [VMware’s virtual networking technology] NSX, or the way I procure my network.’ Then what they want is they want either VxRail or an XC.
If they are ready to transform their network, depending on how they answer the VMware question up front, then they’re either going to be a VxRack SDDC or a Flex.
Two simple questions, four choices.
How much of Dell EMC’s HCI business do each of these four systems represent?
Sakac: Some stuff we say publicly; some stuff we don’t. I’ll give you a bigger-than-a-bread-box idea.
VxRail, we’ve publicly stated, is at a $400 million run rate. And we stated that at the end of Q1. So we are well north of a $400 million run rate at this point. From a cold start to, in essence, a half a billion-dollar business in a year and a half, that’s quite something.
VxRail represents about a third of the vSAN customer base. And that business has grown at 240-plus percent, year-over-year. As Pat Gelsinger said on stage, and Dell Technologies CEO Michael Dell said it, too, it basically grew more than 400 percent over an 18-month period. VSAN growth and VxRail growth. You can think of that as being a huge mass.
Now the XC business, we represent in any given quarter, between a third and a quarter of all Nutanix customers. They chose our OEM of Nutanix. You take a look at Nutanix’s customer count, they’re at about 6,000 customers. We represent roughly about a third of that. So about 2,000 customers.
VxRail has roughly 3,000 customers; XC has roughly 2,500 customers in total, you can see those are two very big numbers of customers.
The number of customers that use VxRack SDDC and Flex are much smaller. They number in the hundreds, not thousands. However, they are enormous customers.
In the keynote on day one, you saw Medtronic, they’re a VxRack SDDC customer. They have five VxRack SDDCs across five data centers. It’s hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of nodes. Our largest VxRack Flex customer has north of 1,500 nodes. That’s 28-racks’ worth of HCI.
In terms of revenue mix, right now we see roughly around two-thirds appliances and roughly a third these giant rack systems.
What’s starting to happen that is interesting is that many larger customers are starting to say, “I’m really interested in these rack-scale approaches.” We’ve got lots of customers that, for example, had five Vx blocks of CI [converged infrastructure] and they’re refreshing, and two of the five turn into a VxRack. Generally those customers that have invested massively in CI say the network is part of the system for them.
What’s driving this growing focus on networking?
Sakac: Hyperconverged appliances were born as a simplification for customers in the world of infrastructure. That was their promise, their brand, their core value proposition. As soon as customers get to a certain scale of appliance count, even though they can build their own network, they start to go, ‘I want the network domain to be as easy as what you’ve done for the storage and compute domain. I want that to be part of the lifecycle. I don’t want it to be my problem anymore I want it to be your problem.’
Anytime a customer is thinking about 10 or more appliances, you should at least ask them, why aren’t you thinking about your network as part of this project?
What percentage of enterprise are going that route and considering networking? Is it still relatively small?
Sakac: Tiny. As a percentage, this is a thing which is both depressing and exciting at the same time.
How so?
Sakac: There are 350,000 vSphere customers. That’s a lot. This represents millions and millions of hosts.
We’re about 50 percent, 60 percent of the CI [converged infrastructure] market as a whole. Let’s say that’s roughly 7,000 customers that have said, ‘I’m sick and tired of building and running my own infrastructure stack. You guys can do it better. Make it easy for me so I can focus on things that matter even more.’
At the same time there’s currently 10,000 vSAN customers. And of this, roughly around 3,000 are using VxRail as the way that they do vSAN.
Nutanix has said that they have around 6,000 customers. And then there’s only hundreds of customers that choose rack-scale systems today. So this is depressing in one dimension because 340,000 customers are still suffering the pain and agony of trying to build their own infrastructure stacks.
It’s also exciting in the sense that it highlights that the world of SDS [software-defined storage] and HCI is still only at its most nascent era. It’s ramping like crazy, but it’s got a huge way to go before it even is a dent in the whole landscape of the ecosystem.
What’s the next phase of HCI?
Sakac: There’s a phase that is staring us right in the face, which is HCI is no longer exciting. And no longer exciting is actually the most exciting phase for real work to occur.
Because HCI is now the standard?
Sakac: Because it’s no longer a big debate. It used to be you’d get into a bar fight with someone about is HCI ready? Is software-defined storage ever going to be good enough to run blank applications? And then eventually you get to a point where it’s like: yep. Everyone knows it works. There are debates about which way is better or worse. But everyone gets on to the business of getting on to business.
HPE and VMware Team Up on Composable Infrastructure, Hybrid Cloud
#HewlettPackardEnterprise is joining forces with #VMware to offer composable infrastructure based on #HPESynergy and #VMwareCloudFoundation. The integration is called, simply enough, VMware Cloud Foundation on HPE Synergy, and HPE is touting it as the industry’s first #composableplatform using VMware’s software-defined data center ( #SDDC ) platform. The companies made the announcement at VMworld in Las Vegas on Tuesday. This is all about the hybrid cloud of course, which providers have come to see as the brass ring for attracting enterprise clients. The solution promises to simplify transformations to a hybrid infrastructure by enabling single-click deployment of traditional and private cloud workloads and allows infrastructure to be dynamically reallocated in minutes. “In today’s competitive digital world, enterprises need technology that enables them to quickly introduce and scale new services,” Ric Lewis, senior VP and general manager of HPE’s Software-Defined and Cloud Group, said in a statement. “HPE Synergy with VMware Cloud Foundation will deliver a private cloud experience that empowers IT to be an internal service provider and enables rapid response to business needs with single-click DevOps delivery.”
http://www.datacenterknowledge.com/cloud/hpe-and-vmware-team-composable-infrastructure-hybrid-cloud
HPE boss Meg Whitman re-entered the race to become Uber's CEO at the eleventh hour — but lost out anyway
#Uber has finally appointed a new chief executive, #Expedia CEO @DaraKhosrowshahi, which is good news for the company but galling for the two unsuccessful candidates embroiled in months of speculation and board-level political drama. They were former #GE CEO @JeffreyImmelt, who announced his withdrawal from the process via Twitter on Sunday, and @MegWhitman, CEO of #HPEnterprise and former CEO of #Ebay. Whitman's rejection will be especially painful, given she publicly withdrew from Uber's CEO search in July but then quietly re-entered the fray late on Friday according to a New York Times report. Whitman, who gave media interviews on Monday, said Uber's board approached her again over the weekend as a possible candidate. "They asked what it would take for me to change my mind," she told The Financial Times. "I was not a contender for this job until the weekend - and I'm not even sure I was then." Whitman had been floated as a possible successor to ousted Uber CEO Travis Kalanick in mid-June. Press speculation continued until she wrote on Twitter in July that she was "not going anywhere."  "Uber's CEO will not be Meg Whitman," she wrote. That left Immelt and then-unnamed candidate Khosrowshahi. But then the board approached Whitman again, and she was apparently the front-runner after Immelt dropped out. But she reportedly had a list of demands conditional to her becoming Uber's next chief. These including reducing what remains of Kalanick's control over the firm, and settling an acrimonious lawsuit between Uber board member Benchmark Capital and Kalanick. According to Whitman's version of events, that was too much to ask. "I said Benchmark and Travis needed to settle their lawsuits and the board needed to put in place a functioning governance structure," she told The New York Times. She added that while it had seemed Kalanick and Uber's other directors "seemed eager to take those steps", the board was "still too fractured to make progress" on her demands. Late on Sunday, Uber had chosen Khosrowshahi as Kalanick's successor.
http://www.businessinsider.com/hpe-ceo-meg-whitman-actually-did-want-to-be-ubers-next-chief-2017-8
Partners: VMware Cloud On AWS Pricing Stacks Up Strongly Against Both Public And Private Cloud Alternatives
Joseph Tsidulko on August 29, 2017, 8:25 pm EDT Partners said the #VMwareCloud On #AWS offering is destined to reshape the cloud landscape with pricing that will appeal to customers evaluating #publiccloud and #privatecloud alternatives. The joint service beats on premises private cloud total cost of ownership, and is even in line with public cloud options including AWS, according to partners who have evaluated the pricing model.  #Datapipe, an AWS premier partner and VMware cloud provider, said an intitial analysis of the price sheet shows the new offering is "competitive with cloud native and cheaper than on prem (alternatives)," said Datapipe Director of Product Management David Lucky. "They kept telling us [pricing is] going to very attractive." [Related: VMware CEO Pat Gelsinger Describes The Virtualization Giant's New Mission To Be A Multi-Cloud Lynchpin] To be successful reselling the offering, Datapipe – which has been testing the offering for the last six months - needs to be able to show customers that if they use VMware Cloud on AWS to move workloads from their on-premises environments, they'll save money, Lucky said, noting the pricing is "in the band where it needed to be." Breaking the VMware Cloud On AWS pricing down for customers is no easy task, given the range of options, services and incentives. But Amazon and VMware have crossed the first hurdle with the new pricing model, he said. AWS CEO Andy Jassy, after joining VMware CEO Pat Gelsinger in a keynote Monday (the same day the pricing was revealed), said that VMware Cloud on AWS is "much more cost effective" than rival hybrid cloud options on the market. John Blumenthal, vice president of project management at CloudPhysics, a cost-optimization software developer with close ties to VMware, told CRN that by introducing the offering at a relatively low price point, VMware has created a market dynamic that might generate broader adoption of its on-premises software. The joint offering with Amazon should drive other "hypervisor-based vendors," especially those selling hyper-converged infrastructure, to commit to VMware so they can leverage the hybrid capabilities needed to remain competitive, Blumenthal said. CloudPhysics has analyzed against thousands of anonymized organizations stored in its IT industry data lake, comparing costs across public cloud providers and on-premises solutions, Blumenthal said. The conclusion: VMware Cloud on AWS "represents the best available cloud cost structure" for running VMware environments once discounts are applied targeting the virtualization vendor's existing installed base. The service costs $8.37 hourly per host, roughly $6,100 a year, according to VMware's price sheet. And there's a minimum of 4 hosts for any cluster. Each host offers 2 CPUs with 36 cores, 512 GB of RAM and a 3.6 TB cache, plus 10.7 TB of raw capacity flash storage. Once reserved instances come into play, at some unspecified point in the future, one-year contracts will offer an additional 30 percent savings, and three-year contracts would cut the bill by 50 percent, according to VMware. That's in line with the total cost of ownership of a generic "native cloud" from any major vendor, which VMware pegs at between 6 and 9 cents per VM, per hour. And it beats the 10- to 17-cent hourly charge for a VM on a comparable on-premises deployment, according to VMware. Rhett Dillingham, a senior analyst at Moor Insights & Strategy, crunched the numbers for himself after prices were revealed, in addition to conferring with the product's marketing team and AWS partner team to get a firmer understanding of the details on the approach to pricing. With VMware Cloud on AWS, VMware is clearly aiming to undercut the equivalent on-premises vSphere environment, especially for customers committing to three-year contracts, Dillingham, previously a product manager at AWS, concluded. There are "significant variables" at play when assessing how closely the cost difference between private verses public cloud infrastructure will align with specific customers with VMware's TCO projections, he said. But overall, when committing to the three-year reserved instances (not yet generally available), VMware users should save money over their on-premises servers, storage, and networking deployments, according to Dillingham. That said, compared to AWS EC2 virtual machines booked on three-year reserved instances – an easier calculation to make – VMware for AWS comes in almost 50 percent more expensive, after taking advantage of VMware's 25 percent "hybrid loyalty program" discount on reserved hosts, he said. The premium over native AWS EC2 "threads the needle of delivering an opening cost story," Dillingham told CRN. The price is "compelling enough to drive consideration by their installed base customers while starting high enough to allow testing how high their margins can be on public cloud pay-per-use and subscription models," Dillingham said. And the VMware software stack lends value beyond delivering an operationally consistent experience across cloud environments. VMware customers could achieve further cost efficiency by taking advantage of performance and availability benefits of features like vSAN to pack more VMs per host than the maximum 32 machines allowed by EC2's equivalent instance family, he told CRN. Eric Kaplan, CTO of Chicago's AHEAD, another partner in the inaugural channel bringing the solution to market, said VMware Cloud on AWS is coming to market at a good time. "We've seen a huge spike in enterprise clients looking for guidance around workload placement," Kaplan told CRN. That's a conversation that goes well beyond cost. It "must incorporate specific use cases, geographic availability, data governance, and accessibility to services beyond just compute, storage, and networking," Kaplan said.
Pivot3 Extends Acuity Capabilities, Demonstrates Early Success with Performance Advantages
#Pivot3 Extends Acuity Capabilities, Demonstrates Early Success with Performance Advantages Pivot3 adds greater support for graphics-intensive VDI environments and highlights the performance advantages of its NVMe flash datapath. August 30, 2017 09:00 AM Eastern Daylight Time AUSTIN, Texas--(BUSINESS WIRE) #Pivot3, the technology leader of #hyperconverged infrastructure ( #HCI ) solutions for the -- defined datacenter, today revealed results of the first phase of comparison testing on its next-generation #AcuityHCI platform. Tests were conducted in Pivot3’s labs and in customer environments, and showed Acuity’s superior performance, density and response time compared to competitor solutions. The results come in conjunction with the release of the latest version of Acuity, 2.1.1, which adds extended capabilities and greater support for graphics-intensive environments. .@Pivot3Inc extends Acuity capabilities, demonstrates early success with performance advantages Tweet this Following its launch in April 2017, Acuity was compared against conventional HCI solutions throughout a three-month period, using industry-standard test tools and similar workloads on similarly-configured HCI systems, while also referencing public data for comparison. This research and testing revealed that Pivot3 Acuity provides: Six times the overall performance, giving customers the confidence to consolidate mixed-application workloads and lower overall costs. Two to three times VDI user density per node (based on Login VSI testing) with 25 percent less hardware, allowing Pivot3 to lower the cost per user by 44 percent over conventional HCI vendors. Sixty-two percent faster response times and nine times faster processing of IOs at sub-millisecond latencies. Faster application response time, even under heavy workloads, results in more satisfied end-users, increases revenue and fosters greater employee productivity. Forty-six percent more TPC-C transactions per minute resulting in up to 47 percent lower cost per transaction. Highly-transactional application workloads deliver maximum performance, with lower cost per transaction. Acuity is the industry’s first priority-aware HCI solution that combines an NVMe flash data path with an advanced quality of service (QoS) engine, enabling IT to confidently consolidate mixed application workloads onto a common infrastructure. The latest version of Acuity also includes greater support for graphics-intensive VDI with density and performance-optimized NVIDIA Tesla GPUs and support for higher RAM capacity in the Acuity nodes to drive application density. HCI has proved itself as the ideal platform for VDI environments, and this release will allow customers to deliver a consistently great VDI user experience along with accelerating time to deploy and lowering the total cost of ownership by achieving higher user densities using Acuity for graphics-intensive VDI. Customer Feedback Echoes Lab Test Results “We’re very impressed with the results we’re seeing from Acuity. The solution is NVMe and sits right on the PCIe bus, plus it’s already four times faster than what we currently have in our environment,” said Phil Lisk, CIO, Bergen County Sheriff’s Office. “The quality of service layer changes the game for us. With improved performance, simple scalability and the ability to reduce our footprint while running more workloads, including our mission critical applications, we know we will get guaranteed performance out of those applications and we can do more with less.” “We’re bullish on Acuity because it responds to our clients’ growing demand for hyperconverged systems that can support broader ranges of workloads on a single platform,” said Steward Sonneland, Principle and CEO, Strategic Integrators. “The combination of Pivot3’s mature, policy-based QoS engine with the accelerated performance of ultra-low latency NVMe PCIe flash is really attractive to our clients who require multiple, mixed application workloads with higher VM densities. This means they’re achieving solid economic advantages, benefiting from a far easier environment to manage with higher end-user satisfaction. Finally, we love the fact that Pivot3’s configuration and pricing model is designed to support a wide range of customer requirements, allowing clients to start small and grow as their business warrants. Pivot3’s performance advantage often allows us to price a deal lower than the competition, since it requires less hardware to do the same job. It’s a pretty incredible solution.” “As more organizations start to use HCI to support core datacenter functions, it will become increasingly important to provide the highest level of performance and support for broader application workload management,” said Ron Nash, CEO of Pivot3. “Acuity is the fastest, simplest and smartest HCI available, and we are thrilled to see so many customers reaping its many benefits. As adoption increases and customers progress closer to a software-defined datacenter, Acuity will be there to deliver greater business value and meet the evolving needs of IT.”
VMworld security asked to probe theft of anti-Nutanix schwag
Scandal has struck #VMworld2017 this week: #hyperconverged software vendor #Maxta says someone stole marketing material in which it was less than kind to #Nutanix. Chief marketing officer Barry Phillips told The Register that parties unknown entered the staff-only section of its VMworld stand and that after their visit, more than 200 badges bearing the slogan “You can't have it your way with Nutanix” were nowhere to be found. Maxta is running a promotion to win a Harley Davidson motorcycle at the Las Vegas shindig, and Phillips says the speaker barking out Harley engine noises to attract passersby was also sabotaged. Maxta has therefore asked security at the Mandalay Bay conference centre, the venue for VMworld 2017, to review CCTV footage in the hope of finding the culprit. Nutanix sells hyperconverged appliances that bundle servers and storage into a single box. Maxta prefers to sell a hyperconverged software stack, then let you choose the servers on which you run that software. There's clearly competitive tension between the two. And a clear motive for the badges to be taken out of circulation, although with more than 20,000 people are at VMworld, taking 200 badges out of circulation is hardly going to be a stunning act of guerilla marketing. Nutanix has responded to our inquiries with a "no comment". We will follow up with Maxta to see if their inquiries yield any results. ®
https://www.theregister.co.uk/2017/08/30/vmworld_hyperheist/
Scale unveils ludicrously fast HCIA with 20μs latencies
#ScaleComputing has run lab tests showing #hyperconverged virtual machine IO performance using #NVM express ( #NVMe ), achieving mean #IOlatencies as low as #20μs delivered to a guest virtual machine. Scale sells #HC1000, #HC2000, #HC4000 and #HC5000 series #hyperconvergedinfrastructure appliances ( #HCIA ) with a #HyperCore operating system and #SCRIBE software storage engine. Scale says guest virtual machines may communicate directly with SCRIBE (using standard Virtio compatible drivers) without involving a hypervisor in any way. This reduces CPU bottlenecks, context switches and system calls, all of which would add latency to each IO. The company has been checking out the use of NVMe flash and 3D XPoint drives and announced the lab test results at VMworld, which is a bit cheeky since it uses the KVM hypervisor. The results are good enough for it to be introducing HyperCore-Direct products, using NVMe drives, in the next few months. Testing of HyperCore-Direct has shown that apps running with VMs can expect near bare-metal NVMe IO performance from mirrored, highly-available, software-defined storage. An example 4-node HyperCore-Direct configuration with all-flash media is able to provide mean IO latencies of 150μs on a mixed (90 per cent read / 10 per cent write) random workload to 24 virtual machines (at a total 240,000 IOPS). With faster Opane media, the same workload achieves mean latencies of 65 microseconds. The 4-node all-flash system has also demonstrated over 2.6m IOPS with under 290μs mean latency, as delivered to a virtualised benchmark application. Windows 7 running IOMeter on a HyperCore-Direct system is able to obtain average latencies of 101μs for a 4k random read workload with a queue depth of 1. Frank Ober, an Intel Optane technology solution architect, said: “Scale Computing’s solution using Intel Optane SSD P4800X is approaching the 10µs or lower bare metal latency for classic virtualisation.” A canned quote from Howard Marks, chief scientist at DeepStorage, LLC, adds: “Scale Computing’s new HyperCore-Direct solution brings the ultra-low latency performance of NVMe to the masses. Less than a year ago, users requiring the sub-500µs latency and low overhead NVMe promised were limited to NVMe SSDs in servers or leading-edge Tier-0 systems that had no data services. Scale’s now delivering that performance on a hyperconverged platform with snapshots, and the other services enterprise applications require.” This is possibly the fastest HCIA system seen in the industry. More info on the test results here, where you can check out a HyperCore-Direct white paper.
Scale Computing Takes Midmarket Hyper-Converged Attack To VMworld; CEO Says New VM Latency Benchmark Is Legacy App 'Game Changer'
#ScaleComputing – which has built a robust business attacking #VMware 's licensing model with its hyper-converged virtualization appliance – used #VMworld2017 to showcase its latest breakthrough: a new virtual machine benchmark that delivers what it is calling unprecedented legacy application performance. The Indianapolis-based Scale is showcasing the performance breakthrough in the heart of its primary competitor's biggest annual event. Specifically, Scale is demonstrating the first hyper-converged solution to include non-volatile memory with #NVMe Express on its HC3 appliance.  [Related: CRN Exclusive: Scale Computing CEO On Attacking VMware's Virtualization Licensing Model And In The Process Saving Customers $32M] That combination has allowed the company to push the technology envelope delivering what it called I/O latencies as low as 20 microseconds for a guest virtual machine. Scale Computing CEO Jeff Ready said the breakthrough is resonating with customers who are suddenly seeing unprecedented performance of what they thought were applications that would have to be completely re-architected for the cloud era. Instead, those customers can now take advantage of Scale Computing's HyperCore Direct stack to completely transform their business. "This is a huge legacy application game changer," said Ready in an interview with CRN. "This is massive in terms of what it means for legacy applications. All those companies that have been nursing legacy applications no longer have to rearchitect those solutions." Traditional all-flash storage run with a latency of two to four milliseconds in comparison of .02 milliseconds with the Scale solution, said Ready. "This is 100 times faster," he said. "What our software innovation has done has exposed just how big a game changer NVMe is." In the case of a defense contractor that tested the HyperCore solution on a legacy application, the Scale solution reduced the time it took that application to run a report from eight hours to a mind boggling four minutes, said Ready. The customer initially thought the Scale solution was "broken," said Ready. "Literally, the customer assumed it didn't work. When you go from eight hours to a few minutes, you are talking about kicking the can down the road a long way." Another example: a Windows 7 virtual machine was getting one tenth of a millisecond of latency with 2.5 Gbytes per second of throughput, said Ready. "My joke is that is probably the fastest Windows 7 has ever run," he said. "We picked Windows 7 intentionally because it has been ridiculed for its performance. We are showing its performance smoking!" Ready said the NVMe low latency is just one more example of how the company is beating bigger competitors in the midmarket with enterprise class performance at a small-to-medium business (SMB) price tag. "We may be the David in the David-Goliath story, but we have some great technology we are putting to good use," he said. "This is awesome." Ready said the Scale Computing offering is in sharp contrast to enterprise upgrades from other vendors that simply do not deliver the performance customers were expecting. "So often we see customers buy the latest hardware to run old apps and they are consistently disappointed," he said. "Our software stack changes that." In the coming months, Scale Computing will be working with its 300 partners to implement the NVMe breakthrough on legacy applications via its HyperCore-Direct stack. "We are going to be looking at helping our partners fine tune the back end storage to optimize HyperCore Direct for the breadth and depth of the legacy applications out there from Windows 7 to SAP," he said. The Scale breakthrough has even attracted the attention of Intel. Frank Ober, an Intel technology solutions architect, said in a press release that the Scale offering based on the Intel Optane P4800X solid state drive approaches the "10µs or lower bare metal latency" for classic virtualization. Michael Goldstein, CEO of LAN Infotech, a Fort Lauderdale, Fla., solution provider, said he is anxious to look at the Scale Computing offering in the wake of the legacy application virtualization performance breakthrough. "We're always looking for the fastest performing solution that brings enterprise performance to our customers at SMB prices," he said. "If Intel is wowed by Scale's applications performance it's a big, big deal. Good for Scale for pushing the technology envelope. This kind of performance is unbelievable if you really start to think about it." The performance breakthrough comes after Scale earlier this year rolled out its first multi-tier channel program as part of a massive midmarket offensive. Scale has prospered by helping small- and midsized business customers avoid VMware licensing fees. Scale shipped 1,600 appliances in 2016, saving customers what it estimates is about $32 million in VMware licensing costs. Howard Marks, a highly respected storage guru and chief scientist at DeepStorage, LLC, an independent storage testing lab, praised Scale for getting out of the NVMe gate faster than competitors with performance that bests even highly touted NVMe network and fabric startups. "Companies like E8 (Storage) and Excelero are delivering that performance but without the data services," he said. Marks said he sees Scale NVMe offering to appeal to midmarket customers with aggressive entry level pricing. "Scale is out early and at their price point not at enterprise price points," he said."This brings the performance of NVMe to their set of customers and price points. To do NVMe from anybody else would be a substantially bigger investment." Marks expects the Scale solution to take its toll on VMware in the midmarket. "I don't see it as a threat to VMware in the core data center, but it is a huge threat to VMware in the remote office, branch office SME (small medium enterprise) space," he said. "It is biting around the edges rather than attacking VMware at the heart of their market."
Cohesity, VMware introduce hyperconverged data protection solution for VMware Cloud Foundation
Recoverability is one of the major challenges enterprises face with their #cloudinfrastructure s today. #Cohesity and #VMware are addressing this problem with a new joint solution, which delivers simple #dataprotection, data center recovery in less than 15 minutes, and a multi-cloud data fabric to compliment the #VMwareCloudFoundation ( #VCF ). The joint solution extends VMware Cloud Foundation with Cohesity’s #Hyperconverged #SecondaryStorage platform, which provides enterprises with a hyperconverged infrastructure that spans primary infrastructure and secondary storage across hybrid clouds. For instance, it can be used for simple data protection and sub-15 minute recovery of a VCF Stack. According to Cohesity, it provides a backup and recovery solution that is fully converged on its Cohesity Hyperconverged Secondary Storage platform. By providing simple data protection on both VCF VMs and Workload VMs, it reduces TCO by 50% or more, according to the company. “The only thing businesses really want from their backup solution is recovery,” said Howard Marks, founder and chief scientist at DeepStorage, an independent test lab that evaluates storage products. He highlighted the instant recovery feature of a VM, and said that “Cohesity recovering a whole data center in under 20 minutes is a game changer.” The solution can also be used as a multi-cloud data fabric for cloud recovery, testing, development and analytics. With the platform’s built-in capabilities, it can move data to the major public clouds.
http://sdtimes.com/cohesity-vmware-hyperconverged-data-protection-solution/
Technical Insights on Computer Systems Stocks -- Arista Networks, Diebold Nixdorf, Dell Technologies, and Hewlett Packard Enterprise
NEW YORK, August 30, 2017 /PRNewswire/ -- If you want a Stock Review on ANET, DBD, DVMT, or HPE then come over to http://dailystocktracker.com/register/ and sign up for your free customized report today. On Tuesday, benchmark US indices were in bullish colors as the NASDAQ Composite closed the trading session up 0.30%; the Dow Jones Industrial Average edged 0.26% higher; and the S&P 500 was up 0.08%. US markets saw four out of nine sectors finishing the day in green, 3 in red, and 2 in neutral territory. Pre-market today, DailyStockTracker.com reviews these four Diversified Computer Systems stocks: #Arista Networks Inc. (NYSE: #ANET ), #DieboldNixdorf Inc. (NYSE: #DBD), #DellTechnologies Inc. (NYSE: #DVMT ), and #HewlettPackardEnterprise Co. (NYSE: #HPE ). Access DailyStockTracker.com's free research reports for this morning's stocks line-up at:
Tuesday, August 29, 2017
Western Digital Is Buying This Flash Storage Company
#WesternDigital says it is acquiring #Tegile, a specialist in fast "flash" storage systems. Terms of the deal were not disclosed. Flash storage systems incorporate solid-state storage, which is faster but can be more delicate than the disk storage that dominated in most companies' data centers up until recently. Flash storage is also more pricey than disk drives although that cost has been falling. Tegile's move comes three months after [f500link] #HewlettPackardEnterprise ( #HPE , +0.73%) paid $1 billion to acquire #NimbleStorage, another flash storage seller and rival to Tegile and #PureStorage (PSTG, +3.02%), among others. Interestingly, HPE's former chief technology officer Martin Fink, who had retired from that company in 2016, came out of retirement early this year to become CTO of Western Digital. SMARTPHONES It’s Google Vs. Apple in the Race for AR Integrated Smartphones San Jose-based Western Digital (WDC, -0.54%) has been a Tegile investor for a few years, and led a Series E funding round of $33 million in April. Overall, Tegile, Newark, Calif., had taken in about $175 million in venture funding since it was founded in 2009.
VMware teams up with Pivotal, Google Cloud on new container service
On the second day of #VMworld, #VMware is announcing it's partnering with #Pivotal and #Google on a new service that enables enterprise customers to quickly deploy enterprise-grade #Kubernetes on premise with #vSphere. The new service, called #PivotalContainerService ( #PKS ), allows for simple network and security provisioning with VMware #NSX. It also offers constant compatibility with #GoogleContainerEngine ( #GKE ).
PKS is a commercial release of the open source Project Kubo, a collaborative, joint engineering effort between Google and Pivotal that delivers a BOSH-managed Kubernetes environment. With PKS, customers get all of the software-defined infrastructure as code from VMware and the automation and orchestration from Pivotal's BOSH, with Kubernetes layered on top.
Typically, enterprise development teams could spend weeks or months attempting to deploy containers, with the work of provisioning network IP addresses and firewall rules impeding agility, said Chris Wolf, CTO of global field and industry at VMware.
"PKS gives developers full automation to do all of these things very quickly," Wolf said. "We give you that turnkey Kubernetes deployment, but also give developers the native API and native command line experience" of Kubernetes that they're looking for, he said.
With the constant compatibility guarantee, PKS should offer the same frequent updates available from GKE. The Kubernetes project has had releases every three months over the last year, and "users have really appreciated the velocity and innovation out of that," said Aparna Sinha, Google's product management lead for Kubernetes and Container Engine.
PKS also features a jointly developed version of Open Services Broker API. "It allows all different cloud abstractions to have shared data services and a shared service catalog between them," said James Watters, VP and GM of the Pivotal Cloud Platform
http://www.zdnet.com/article/vmware-teams-up-with-pivotal-google-cloud-on-new-container-service/
VxRail 'billion-dollar business' soon, says Dell EMC's Sakac
LAS VEGAS -- As president of Dell EMC's converged platforms division, Chad Sakac leads a group that performs a lot of balancing acts. Dell EMC's converged platforms include products in the fast-growing hyper-converged market as well as the converged infrastructure (CI) systems that hyper-convergence often replaces. It also sells converged infrastructure built around Cisco servers and switching, as well as those with Dell's own hardware that competes with Cisco. And its #hyperconverged products include #XC appliances powered by #Nutanix software through a #DellOEM deal before its merger with #EMC. XC systems compete with #VMware #vSAN-powered #VxRail, an EMC product before the merger.  Customers may need a scorecard to keep track of Dell EMC's hyper-converged infrastructure (HCI) lineup. Besides VxRail and XC, there is #VxRack rackscale #HCI and #VxRackFlex with EMC's ScaleIO #softwaredefined #blockstorage. And Dell-owned #VMware sells its #vSAN software standalone and through other hardware partners. On the CI side, Dell EMC recently pared its product line by eliminating VBlock -- the original CI product -- in favor of #VxBlocks with VMware software-based switching instead of #Cisco 's.
We caught up with Sakac at VMWorld 2017 to discuss all things converged and hyper-converged. He said while hyper-converged is "hot, hot, hot," it still has a long way to go to catch traditional SANs, and admitted the decision to scrap the Vblock CI brand caused "sleepless nights." Where's the storage news at VMworld? Sakac: One of the big storage news pieces is the ongoing market shift toward software-defined. I wrote in my blog that the official Dell Technologies point of view is the majority of workloads today can be well-served by software defined storage/HCI. And coming from the storage market leader, that's a pretty strong statement. If you're not an incumbent, you have nothing to lose. If you are an incumbent with hundreds of thousands of customers, people who've built their careers on SANs, to say we think today the majority of workloads would work fine on ScaleIO, on vSAN and on VxRail, VxRack -- that's a big piece of storage news.
Partners: New HPE Storage Exec Appointment Could Boost Enterprise Account Engagement
by Steven Burke on August 28, 2017, 6:45 pm EDT
#HewlettPackardEnterprise ( #HPE ) has named #Nimble 's former sales chief, @KeeganRiley, as the vice president and general manager of the North America storage business. That opens the door for tighter storage alignment with partners in enterprise accounts. Partners see the appointment as a sign of HPE's channel commitment given the recent 100 percent pledge to run all of newly acquired Nimble and #SimpliVity 's sales through partners. They are hoping the 100 percent channel commitment will trickle up into enterprise accounts.  [Related: Partners: HPE's 100 Percent SimpliVity-Nimble Partner Pledge Is A Game Changer] Before taking the top Americas storage job, Riley spent five years as vice president of sales for Nimble and four years as a district manager for enterprise accounts for the HPE storage division. John Kolimago, executive vice president and general manager of cloud solutions for Anexinet of Blue Bell, Pa., No. 209 on the 2017 CRN Solution Provider 500, said the Riley appointment could definitely increase partner engagement in enterprise accounts. He said Riley's appointment should "energize" the enterprise storage sales charge. "It's no secret that this guy had 100 percent channel strategy at Nimble and now HPE is embracing that," said Kolimago. "This is a leadership move that could trickle into enterprise accounts which would benefit all partners … There will absolutely be a benefit. If you are convincing customers that it is 100 percent channel for Nimble and SimpliVity, Synergy, 3Par and other products are going to ride along with that. This is going to benefit partners across the whole portfolio." The 100 percent Nimble and SimpliVity pledge sends a no-holds-barred message to the field that HPE reps must engage with partners, said Kolimago. "For an HPE rep that is used to equivocating and making exceptions they have to learn the talk track to say to their customers: 'This is 100 percent channel," he said. "That rep has to learn the language of 'I respect your desire as a customer, but partners are going to give you the best support and deal.'" Kolimago said Riley's leadership will be critical to getting the "rank and file" to fall in behind the 100 percent channel commitment. The Nimble acquisition has opened up the small and midsized business storage market to partners, said Kolimago. "Bringing Nimble technology into HPE completes the missing link in the HPE storage portfolio," he said. "SMB is the growth engine for all of IT right now. So many partners get caught up in maintaining their top three customers. The partners that are going to win are going to be the ones that get new logos. Nimble is a foot in the door offering that is priced right and far better performing than the competition." Steve Hilts, a managing partner at Snowcap Technologies, one of HPE's top Platinum partners, hopes the 100 percent pledge will lead to tighter alignment between HP direct sales reps and partners in enterprise accounts. That alignment would result in a dramatic increase next generation software defined infrastructure sales for HPE and its partners, said Hilts. "If [HPE CEO] Meg [Whitman] can focus on that 100 percent pledge in enterprise accounts, it could result in a huge increase in sales for HPE and its partners," said Hilts. "We are competing with Dell EMC and we need a 100 percent focus with the channel." Chris Case, CEO of Sequel Data Systems, an Austin, Texas-based solution provider and HPE channel partner, said he is also hopeful the recent 100 percent Nimble and SimpliVity channel commitment will result in stronger HPE enterprise field account engagement. "We would love to see that 100 percent pledge trickle into enterprise accounts," said Chase. "That would be beneficial to both HPE and us."
Mellanox Collaborates with VMware to Accelerate Applications in Virtualized Data Centers
LAS VEGAS--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- #MellanoxTechnologies, Ltd. (NASDAQ: #MLNX ), a leading supplier of high-performance, end-to-end smart interconnect solutions for #datacenter servers and storage systems, today announced that it is collaborating with #VMware to help customers make the performance of their storage systems more efficient. The solution will be previewed at #VMworld® 2017, with Mellanox #iSER (iSCSI Extensions for Remote Direct Memory Access [ #RDMA ]) networking solutions leveraging #VMware #vSphere®. iSER uses an Ethernet Storage Fabric as a unified connectivity solution for compute and storage, thereby eliminating the need for Fibre Channel while providing improved performance at a lower cost. Preliminary benchmark results show that iSER accelerates storage throughput by more than 3x and IOPs by more than 2x when compared to ordinary iSCSI (Internet Small Computer System Interface). In addition, it also enables 2x better efficiency versus Fibre Channel storage connectivity. “Modern applications must be able to analyze large amounts of data in a very short amount of time” Tweet this iSER is an industry standard protocol that uses RDMA technology to eliminate the network processing overhead, while preserving full compatibility with the widely used iSCSI protocol. Thus it enjoys the proven stability, resiliency, security, high availability and recovery benefits of iSCSI, which makes it an enterprise-ready storage networking solution. iSER uses high performance RoCE (RDMA over Converged Ethernet) NICs, over ordinary Ethernet networks without requiring lossless configuration. This allows cloud, storage, and enterprise customers to deploy iSER more quickly and easily while accelerating application performance, improving total infrastructure efficiency and reducing cost. “Modern applications must be able to analyze large amounts of data in a very short amount of time,” said Kevin Deierling, vice president, marketing, Mellanox Technologies. “This requires both high performance and efficient storage systems with Ethernet connectivity, which makes iSER technology the ideal Ethernet Storage Fabric for today’s data centers.” The VMware vSphere platform enables businesses to leverage virtualization to maximize performance, availability and efficiency for infrastructure and applications. vSphere serves as an ideal foundation for any cloud environment, allowing businesses to better utilize the underlying physical hardware resources across multiple systems and provides pools of virtual resources to the data center. “VMware continues to add new capabilities to vSphere enabling it to be the next-gen infrastructure ready for next-gen apps,” said Mike Adams, senior director, Cloud Platform Product Marketing, VMware. “Enabling applications to achieve faster access to storage over iSER facilitates the use of Ethernet for networking, compute and storage. This can simplify customers’ experience with automation and management at scale and can provide an improved customer experience.” “We are pleased to see the growing support for iSER technology in the marketplace,” said Nelson Nahum, CEO and co-founder of Zadara Storage. “We implemented iSER at the core of our Zadara Storage Cloud and have seen a 10x reduction in I/O latency, enabling our VPSA Storage-as-a-Service platform to perform better than traditional enterprise storage arrays.” “In our testing, iSER significantly enhances data delivery, enabling applications deployed on virtualized infrastructure to realize more performance and lower latency from their data infrastructure,” said Marc Fleischmann, CEO and founder of Datera. “As a software-defined data platform that enables cloud-independent IT-as-a-Service models for enterprises and cloud-centric businesses, Datera customers can non-disruptively integrate new technologies such as iSER at their own pace.” Demonstrations and presentations at VMworld 2017 U.S. (Aug. 27 – Aug. 30): Visit Mellanox at booth #327 to learn about the benefits of using Mellanox’s 10/25/40/50/100 Gb/s Ethernet, RoCE and iSER on top of VMware vSphere.
http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20170828005109/en/Mellanox-Collaborates-VMware-Accelerate-Applications-Virtualized-Data
Portal Progress Allows Dell EMC To Reinstate Training Requirements For Federal Partners
#DellEMC says it has repaired problems with its partner portal sufficiently to put training requirements back on track for federal solution providers. This comes a little more than a month after Dell EMC told telling those partners they would not be expected to meet training requirements for program tier eligibility in the current fiscal year. "We have made significant progress improving #PartnerPortal, and #PartnerAcademy," #DellEMC Federal Partner Program Vice President @TracyPavillard told partners in a recent memo. Accordingly, to achieve FY 19 tier and marketing incentive fund eligibility, all Dell EMC federal partner program partners must complete training certifications by Dec. 31."  Reinstating training requirements reverses a late July decision to waive those requirements because of problems with the company's partner portal, which is the only way for partners to access training programs. [Related: Dell EMC Commercial PC Boss Davis Pushes Partners To Work With Teams To Boost Enterprise PC Sales] A top executive at a Titanium-level Dell EMC solution provider said that while the portal has been "wonky," federal partners have been adamant about getting it fixed. "With proper motivation, anything can happen," the solution provider executive said. "We started hunting down the people who had the ability to fix the portals. We were calling them every two hours, and it's probably been weeks. We'll see what happens as we get closer to the deadline." While federal partners appear to be back on track as far as training is concerned, Dell EMC Vice President of Global Channel Programs Kimberly DeLeon told partners during a webcast last week that training requirements for the second half of this year would be waived because some partners were having problems accessing the partner academy. "We're working diligently, and most partners will have access this week," DeLeon said. "By Sept. 30, all issues will be addressed. We'll be waiving training requirements for the second half of the year because partners haven't had sufficient time to complete the training." Training and certifications make up the foundation of partner efforts to maintain or advance their status within the Dell EMC partner program. The partner portal is the only way for solution providers to access training. As Dell's $58 billion acquisition of EMC neared, Channel Chief John Byrne pushed partners to complete training programs and prepare for the higher tier revenue requirements that were coming. Dell EMC organized its new, unified program into Gold, Platinum and Titanium tiers and "status matched" partners into those tiers, giving them a year to hit their new, aggressive revenue targets. Dell EMC's federal channel program is technically separate from, but closely mirrors, its commercial program. The new, unified federal program was launched just before the new, commercial program went live early this year. Dell EMC's online partner portal has been problematic from the beginning. The system was designed as a central location for partners to do training, automate and track rebates, certifications, program advancement and other vital aspects of life in the Dell EMC program. It very quickly became apparent that the system wasn't ready for prime time when it launched in February and partners had difficulty navigating the system. Byrne owned up to the problems, acknowledging that some partners "had massive problems" with the portal, and highlighting his team's efforts to spend "24 hours a day, seven days a week working to resolve those problems."
Russians Lead the Quantum Computer Race With 51-Qubit Machine
The Quantum Supremacy Threshold #Qubits allow the development of new computational algorithms, which are much more productive than silicon-based iterations. The more qubits a #quantumcomputer uses, the more processing power it has. But most advanced #quantumcomputationalsystems available today are still far behind #supercomputers in terms of their practical applications–although the situation is changing very fast indeed. There’s a theoretical threshold after which quantum computers would surpass most powerful classical supercomputers. Scientists believe it should happen somewhere around 50 qubits. Currently, the most advanced quantum chips are below 20 qubits, such as the #IBMQ that uses 17 qubits. #Google also is no stranger to the quantum race, as it’s working on a 49-qubit 14-meter machine using #superconductingcircuits. 51 “ #ColdAtoms ” to Make the World’s Most Advanced #QuantumComputer Google’s 49 qubit computer was supposed to be the highlight of the ICQT 2017 (The International Conference on #QuantumTechnologies, held July 12th–16th in Moscow). Designed by John Martinis, a professor at University of California at Santa Barbara, Google’s computer will use a chip embedded with 49 qubits (0.6 cm by 0.6 cm). But as groundbreaking Google’s machine might be, it was another machine that stole the show. During the same day of the ICQT 2017 that Martinis was supposed to give a lecture about his quantum device, Mikhail Lukin, the co-founder of RQC, made his own announcement. Mikhail’s team, including Russian and American scientists, have built the world’s most powerful functional quantum computing system, running on 51 qubits. The new quantum system uses an array of 51 “cold atoms” in lieu of qubits. Locked up on “laser cells”, these atoms should be kept at extremely low temperatures. “… we observe a novel type of robust many-body dynamics corresponding to persistent oscillations of crystalline order after a sudden quantum quench,” said researchers in a paper available at arXiv.org. “These observations enable new approaches for exploring many-body phenomena and open the door for realizations of novel quantum algorithms.” The model was successfully tested in the labs of Harvard University, solving physics problems that silicon chip-based supercomputers would have a hard time replicating.
Dell EMC Drives New Levels of Cross-Portfolio Integration and Support for VMware Customers
News summary New technology integrations between Dell EMC and VMware provide great value for mutual customers while simplifying and accelerating IT service delivery New and enhanced products and solutions span hyper-converged infrastructure, hybrid cloud platforms, data protection and all-flash storage arrays End-to-end approach delivers increased performance at scale, streamlines data protection, simplifies management and optimizes storage resources Full story Dell EMC today announced important enhancements and integrations across its broad portfolio of solutions that support VMware. These enhancements help customers fuel IT Transformation initiatives to achieve digital transformation goals through software-defined data centers, converged infrastructures and hybrid cloud. There is an ongoing need for customers to transform their legacy infrastructures or risk falling behind their competitors. According to the Enterprise Strategy Group ESG 2017 IT Transformation Maturity Curve study commissioned by Dell EMC, companies further along in their IT Transformation initiatives see improved competitiveness and business outcomes, enhanced IT spending efficiency, more IT funding for new projects and innovation, as well as higher levels of internal stakeholder satisfaction. To achieve this vision for a digital future, IT Transformation requires modernized infrastructure and the software to run, manage, connect and protect multiple workloads across the data center, clouds and devices. "The rapid evolution of the digital business is placing exponential demands on IT, creating new pressures for organizations to implement the infrastructure required to become digital enterprises and remain competitive," said David Goulden, president, Dell EMC. "The close collaboration between Dell EMC and VMware delivers powerful data center solutions, and financing and services options that modernize infrastructure with a software-defined approach to help mutual customers accelerate innovation and effectively meet their IT and digital transformation requirements." "Dell EMC and VMware offer broad and complementary portfolios, to enable our mutual customers to achieve greater value from their IT investments," said Pat Gelsinger, chief executive officer, VMware. "Simplifying and increasing the speed of IT service delivery to drive positive business results, while lowering costs, boosting competitiveness and speeding time to market." Enhancements to Dell EMC's portfolio of VMware solutions provides mutual customers the following benefits: Simplify and speed IT Transformation initiatives by modernizing infrastructure for VMware environments and data centers at any scale with extensive advancements across Dell EMC's hyper-converged infrastructure (HCI) and hybrid cloud platforms. These advances span Dell EMC's broad portfolio of VMware-optimized turnkey HCI solutions (Dell EMC VxRail Appliances and Dell EMC VxRack SDDC), turnkey hybrid cloud platforms (Dell EMC Enterprise Hybrid Cloud and Dell EMC Native Hybrid Cloud) and flexible Ready Solutions (VMware Ready™ Systems from Dell EMC and Dell EMC vSAN™ ReadyNodes™ featuring the 14th generation of Dell EMC PowerEdge servers). Deliver transformational data protection for VMware environments with Dell EMC Data Protection Suite for Applications, providing 5X faster backups over traditional methods direct from VMware vSphere®. This enables mutual customers to address the technical and operational challenges associated with protecting large, fast-changing, mission-critical applications and virtualized databases, while providing greater self-service to application owners and retaining governance and oversight by IT. Dell EMC Data Protection is also the first VMware partner for providing backup and recovery for workloads running in VMware Cloud on Amazon Web Services. Create a scalable infrastructure with intelligent automation and a secure foundation with Dell EMC vSAN ReadyNodes featuring the 14th generation of Dell EMC PowerEdge servers. Combining VMware vSAN, the industry-leading software powering HCI solutions, with Dell EMC PowerEdge, the world's best-selling server portfolio1, speeds time-to-value, drives lower costs and reduces risk. These ready nodes are pre-configured, validated building blocks that offer the most flexibility for customers who prefer to build and manage infrastructure themselves. This represents the first step in transitioning the entire Dell EMC hyper-converged portfolio to 14th generation PowerEdge servers by the end of 2017. Provide even more performance, agility and simplicity for #VDI environments with #XtremIO #X2, the next generation of #DellEMC 's purpose-built #AllFlash array, which supports 40% more VDI users per #XBrick at up to 30% lower $/desktop. With its #VMware #vSphere plug-in and VMware #vRealizeOrchestration features, XtremIO X2 is designed to provide streamlined automation and modernization while simplifying management and monitoring for IT departments with VMware infrastructures. Enabling Dell EMC and VMware customers to address IT financing needs, Dell Financial Services (DFS) provides flexible, simple, predictable ways for organizations to adopt new technologies. Whether implementing a hyper-converged infrastructure solution for the first time, planning a PC refresh or modernizing an entire data center, DFS has a consumption model tailored to the technology being implemented.
Sphere 3D Introduces New HVE HyperConverged Open Architecture with Support for Glassware 2.0 Containers and V3 Desktop Cloud Orchestrator
SAN JOSE, Calif., Aug. 28, 2017 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Sphere 3D Corp. (NASDAQ:ANY), a containerization, virtualization, and data management solutions provider, is pleased to announce the introduction of a new HVE branded HyperConverged Infrastructure (HCI) Open Architecture (“OA”). HVE’s HCI OA provides a small 2-node footprint for converged compute and storage, scales to 64 nodes, and is delivered on HVE appliances with all flash and/or NVMe configurations. Customers can deploy HCI OA faster, with a reduced initial financial commitment, a lower Total Cost of Ownership (TCO), and with greater flexibility to scale compute or storage separately than traditional HCI. HCI OA was developed to enable an open software defined datacenter approach that empowers customers to introduce new technologies into their data center ecosystem, and marks a paradigm shift from traditional HCI logic. Traditional HCI solutions force vendor lock-in for customers, tightly couple compute and storage, and require scaling of these resources in a closed and predefined correlation of capacity and capability. HCI OA can start with just two nodes, and then expand as needs dictate. The HVE HCI OA architectural advantage allows customers to deploy HCI technology much faster, provides scale out options individually for either compute or storage, and provides high-availability HCI clustering. The HVE solution also utilizes high-performance advanced technologies, and introduces an open architecture for software defined storage and overall software defined data center solutions. #HVE #HCI OA supports #VMWare #vSphere and #Microsoft #HyperV virtualization architectures, #Sphere3D #Glassware2.0® #containers, #DesktopCloudOrchestrator™ ( #DCO ) and #SnapServer 's #GuardianOperatingSystem™ ( #GOS ); yet it integrates into traditional storage environments. Starting from a blank canvas and building from the ground up based on customer feedback, HVE’s HCI OA design is made possible by a number of technology advancements in compute, data transmission, and storage. The HVE HCI OA hardware platform includes the HVE “Business In A Box” (BIX) converged servers that can be configured from 3TB-20TB usable storage per appliance, the HVE-STACK 2U 4 blade system supporting 3TB-12TB per blade, and HVE VDI Appliances. Dave Harmon, VP of Virtualization, stated, “Our engineering team has been observing the changes in technology and listening to customers’ needs. As such, we realized the need for a Hyper Converged makeover of today’s current architectures. Sphere 3D’s HVE, SnapServer, and Glassware teams of engineers have come together to position our HCI OA to meet the rapidly changing market for HCI.” “Being able to leverage adaptive software defined solutions with legacy application support through containers on next generation platforms has taken some significant engineering expertise. The engineering effort and investment were well worth it, as we believe that our new HCI OA architecture really opens up our HCI vision to our customers,” said Peter Tassiopoulos, President of Sphere 3D. “Industry analysts agree that HCI architecture is game changing, and we believe our new HCI 2.0 approach puts Sphere 3D on the forefront of this change.”
Michael Dell’s Advice to Entrepreneurs: ‘You Better Come Up With Something Unique’
@MichaelDell has some advice for people who want to start their own business and who dream to be a successful entrepreneur: “Go for it.” The longer explanation from the founder and CEO of #DellComputer, once one of the most popular and best-selling PC makers in the world, goes like this: “Don’t be afraid to make a mistake. Experiment. If you want to really make it big, you better come up with something unique, differentiated that nobody else is doing.” Adding a few words of caution, he said: “And if you go and ask people if it’s a good idea, most of them will tell you ‘no’. So don’t go ask.” @MichaelDell is giving that same speech to the 140,000 people working for the new #DellTechnologies that came about through a huge $63 billion merger between #Dell and #EMC, creating one of the biggest hardware and software technology companies in the world.
http://fortune.com/2017/08/28/michael-dell-leadership-advice/
Dell EMC, HPE, and Lenovo outline next-gen hyper-converged systems on VMware
#Hyperconvergence in the #datacenter is at the center of a series of announcements out of the #VMworld conference kicking off in Las Vegas this week. #DellEMC, #Lenovo, and #HewlettPackardEnterprise unveiled systems designed to boost their portfolios aimed at the lucrative converged systems market. Dell EMC, parent company to #VMware, has a span of product rollouts that the company says will reduce infrastructure complexity for enterprises. Products include new VMware Ready Systems, expanded features on the Dell EMC's turnkey hybrid cloud platforms, and advancements to #VxRail Appliances and #VxRack #SDDC Systems. Each update is designed to help modernize IT for VMware environments and data centers at any scale, according to Dell EMC.
As for HPE, the company has announced what it describes as a composable platform for VMware Cloud Foundation based on HPE Synergy. HPE says the platform will help IT organizations deploy infrastructure as a service and private clouds in minutes and lower virtual machine costs compared to public clouds and traditional server racks.
"HPE Synergy powered by Cloud Foundation will provide a powerful solution to consolidate traditional, private and cloud native workloads onto a single integrated infrastructure platform that is simple to deploy and operate," said John Gilmartin, VP and GM of Vmware's Integrated Systems business.
The VMware Cloud Foundation on HPE Synergy should be certified and available from HPE and channel and distribution partners in late 2017, while vSphere and vSAN are certified and available with HPE Synergy today.