February 22, 2012

VMWVCaaS: VMworld Video Converting as a Service

VMworld 2011 Sessions in iTunes

Stupid title aside, one of the things I’ve done in the past is downloaded all of the VMworld sessions and convert them so I can play them on my iPad/Apple TV devices. Based on some Twitter conversations last year it seemed like a number of people do the same thing – rather than everything spending their time going through the process of downloading, converting and tagging each video file, I thought why not consolidate efforts. I’ve started this process again this year and have created a share on my Dropbox folder with the finished videos. If you attended VMworld and would like access let me know and I can add you. Hopefully it can save others some work.  Message me on Twitter or send me an email via the contact me page at the top and I can add you to the share.

Also, and hopefully this goes without saying, if you didn’t go to VMworld and are looking for the sessions – I believe you can buy a pass on the VMworld.com site to access the sessions.  The point is, if you don’t have a way to show that you already have access to the sessions, I’m not going to be able to give you access to the Dropbox folder if you request access.  Not interested in the VMworld police chasing me down :)

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VMworld 2011 Day 3 Wrap Up

Today was a little lighter on new content as most of the big announcements were made yesterday during the keynote.  I’ve written in the past about using an iPad more and more during my workday, and I took the opportunity today to visit the end user computing booth in the solutions exchange and talk with Tedd Fox, the product manager for end user computing.  I use the view client on my iPad often – it’s not quite “there” for making it a standard use today in my opinion – but it’s a very functional application that works great in a pinch or for quick tasks.  The View client utilizes only PCoIP (no option for RDP) and one of the minor annoyances I had with the product that Wyse PocketCloud didn’t suffer from (PocketCloud is an RDP connection to View) was that if I switch to another app and then switch back to View – I have to re-login to my session again.  The next version of the View client will support being able to multi task.  It was also mentioned that the next version will have an embedded RSA soft token.  Another new feature I was very impressed with was this:

Just having a big keyboard and trackpad probably doesn’t look like much of a feature, but what you don’t see is that it’s connected to an external display via the iPad display adapter so you get your full View desktop display on the external monitor and a large keyboard and large trackpad above the keyboard on the iPad screen.  I know Apple won’t allow this, but I’d love it if I could pair a bluetooth mouse with the iPad, as well as my bluetooth keyboard (which I already can pair) and then when I’m in the office I could have a very functional and portable thin client device.

My afternoon was a tour of the SwitchNAP datacenter.  SwitchNAP was one of the locations for housing the servers used by the VMware Labs team.  There have been a lot of blog posts about SwitchNAP so I don’t want to duplicate too much of the work that is already out there, but their datacenter sits in the old Enron Broadband building.  Around the early 2000′s Enron was planning on arbitraging bandwidth much like they were doing with power.  Right before they were set to open they declared bankruptcy.  SwitchNAP was across the street at this point and spent the next 9 months pulling that facility out of Enron’s bankruptcy.  As you would imagine I jumped at the chance to tour the facility – especially after finding out it was completely free.  I knew this place was secure, and unlike any other datacenter – when we pulled up this was the view by the security door.

Unfortunately that was the only picture I was able to get, we were informed that pictures of any kind are not allowed once inside the doors and considering we always had a minimum of two security guards with us with arms bigger than my thigh – I didn’t try and sneak any pics…  They did mention we can use the pictures from their website however, this picture is of the main entrance:

And this picture is a close up of the gate we had to go through to get out of the lobby and into the building:

Once through the gate, we walked down a hallway and about halfway down you could see into their NOC(gotta say, the cubes are a little nicer than mine…):

Inside the datacenter there were a number of these(of note is the enclosed hot aisles, our tour guide also mentioned that they currently have the lowest PUE of any datacenter):

And the last picture showing the 3 different feeds, none of which are ever over 66% utilization:

A few stats on the campus:

  • 2,200,000 sq ft of space
  • 500 MVA power capacity
  • 567 MVA of generator capacity
  • 294 MVA UPS suply
  • 202,000 tons of cooling
  • Armed 24/7/365 by military trained security staff

As I mentioned the VMworld Labs were hosted here with 2 x 1Gb point to point links, we also heard they have customers like eBay with around 36PB of storage (soon to double that) with a large Hadoop cluster cranking away on the data, Mozy has resources in the building as well as certain government agencies they weren’t able to share details on.

One thing that struck me was everything is done for a reason there, and one example of that is they custom make their racks and paint the front of the rack blue (picture below) and the back of the rack red.  The tour guide told us that a number of their customers would accidentally rack things backwards so they did this so that blue indicates the cold aisle and red indicates that contained hot aisle.

Leaving the facility the only word I could think of that sums up everything about SwitchNAP is ‘overkill’.  And I mean that in a good way, it’s unbelievably secure and everything is designed to support any type of failure you could think of.

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VMworld 2011 Day 2 Wrap Up

Day two started out with a keynote from Steve Herrod, which was one of the best VMware keynotes I have seen.  I thought he did a great job not only on the simplicity of the presentation (whiteboard style pictures and not text heavy PowerPoint slides) but also on the content and delivery.  He talked about some of the futures of VMware but blended in just the right about of technical information and screenshots/demos to keep the audience engaged in the presentation.  There were a number of new announcements made and it really tied in well with the keynote given yesterday by Paul Maritz about moving to a post-PC era.  The idea moving forward is that we need to be able to assign policies based on the person, and not based on the device.  It shouldn’t matter matter if I’m using my mobile phone, my tablet device or my laptop – I should have access to the same set of applications, I should have access to the same data – and perhaps most importantly, IT should be able to be manage those applications and data.

One of the demos that was shown was for ThinApp Factory, the idea here is that we can automate the extraction of the app out of our Windows OS.  While there have been comments recently about VMware’s enhancements to View (or lack thereof), this was the first item among many mentioned today that really showed some of the amazing features VMware will have to solidify their post PC era solutions.

Horizon mobile touches on what I covered yesterday in my post about the Day 1 keynote from Paul Maritz, the idea is the user gives their phone number to IT and they can push out a “work phone” down to the users phone and have separation between their personal phone and their work phone.  They mentioned LG and Samsung will soon be coming out with compatible Android based phones in the near future.

AppBlast screenshot courtesy of VMware

I touched on this briefly towards the end of our VDI Kung Fu session on VMware Community TV, but I’m a heavy tablet user – and more specifically, a heavy iPad user.  Going from meeting to meeting all day I’ve stopped bringing my heavy laptop with me all the time and only bring my iPad and a case to hold a stylus, business cards, and VGA Adapter.  I use it for presentations, whiteboarding, light Office work etc.  One of the challenges in using it to work on a Word or Excel file is that you have multiple steps to first get the data into the application but then to get the data back to the original location after you edit it.  It’s far from a simple, seamless process.  The demo today of AppBlast showed an iPad user who was able to access Excel 2010 via the native Safari web browser and edit their spreadsheet.  AppBlast is a service that can deliver any application to any device supporting HTML 5.  Windows vSphere Client?  Microsoft Office?  Putty? Absolutely.  I can’t wait to get my hands on this and I think delivering it via HTML 5 is perfect, with an App you need to worry about the politics of the App Store you are living in – but with HTML 5 any device that supports it can be off and running.  Below was the screenshot VMware used that displays a list of applications the user is entitled to that they can then launch via the Safari browser on their iPad.

Getting access to my corporate applications is great, but what about my documents?  Next Steve asked the crowd who was all using Dropbox and the overwhelming response was “Yes”, however the next question was who should be using Dropbox in their environment and the vast majority did not.  Enter Project Octopus – a Dropbox style alternative (it even has hooks into Windows Explorer to put a green check mark on files/folders ala Dropbox) but more important – IT still can remain in control of the data.  This is something I’m really excited for, at Nexus we (like many companies out there) are having challenges sharing documents between our team especially when we aren’t in the office regularly.  There are some solutions out there like Dropbox or Box.net, but do you want your corporate data sitting on Amazon S3?  Probably not.It almost seems like “old news” already(it’s funny how thanks to Twitter we can feel like other things that just happened hours ago might be considered old news), but there are amazing performance improvements in vSphere 5:

  • 32 vCPUs per virtual machine
  • 1TB RAM per virtual machine
  • 1,000,000 IOPS per ESX host
  • Say hello to the monster VMs

Performance improvements are great, but noisy neighbor issues can cause performance problems in any environment.  We can better handle this problem now with some of the enhancements around storage and network IO control.  Also announced was VXLAN, which isn’t yet an IETF standard but they are working on it.  It allows you to encapsulate a layer 2 packet inside of a layer 3 packet (along the lines of Cisco OTV), imagine failing over your datacenter and not having to worry about re-assigning IP addresses to your servers to match the network info at the other location.

There was also a demo of “Navigator” which has the ability to discover services running on an ESX host.  Services like SQL among others are discovered automatically, and without the need for installing an agent.  It also requires no changes to the operating system or the application.  It has the ability to discover how applications relate to each other and we were even able to see the protection level of the VM right from this dashboard (protection level meaning if it was part of a Site Recovery Manager plan).

I mentioned yesterday I would post some pictures of the #CXIparty, well – I forgot… However, Steven Foskett has some pictures on his Flickr page here and trust me, they are much better than anything my iPhone would have taken.

Today was pretty light on sessions for me, with the keynote in the morning and VDI Kung Fu just after lunch – I ended up spending some time in the solutions exchange after that.  One session that I was interested in was BCO2874 – vSphere High Availability 5.0 and SMP Fault Tolerance.  One of the barriers to adoption of FT has been it’s only supported on single vCPU machines.  Otherwise it’s an amazing feature: a VM running in lockstep on another ESX host that can survive a host failure (not with HA – but an instant take over by the shadow virtual machine).  One of the things I like about it is the ease of use, it’s not something that needs to be configured when the VM is created and has to stay running all the time.  Instead, you can enable it only when necessary – turn on FT when you have the need for it, and disable it later if you want to.  This session covered multi vCPUs in FT protected virtual machines and actually showed a demo of a 4 vCPU Oracle database server being protected by FT.  As you might expect, this generates quite a bit of network traffic – the demo given used about 20% of a 10GbE link for FT traffic.

That’s it for today – tonight is a number of great vendor parties!

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VMworld 2011 Day 1 Wrap Up

@DuncanYB @FrankDenneman and @ccolotti.  I was a little worried about making this session due to some Sunday night activities but luckily I made it and I always have the weekend to catch up on sleep…

One session I really enjoyed was ESXi Quiz Show, this was without a doubt the most entertaining session I have ever attended.  It was a game show setup with @johntroyer as the host.  I really hope future VMworld’s will have similar sessions and I’d love it if they could include audience participation via Twitter.

The keynote this year was on the afternoon of Day 1, and a few of the highlights from it were:

  • Labs were 100% public cloud this year (last year it was a hybrid cloud model)
  • Over 200,000 VMs are expected to be deployed in the labs
  • There are over 60,000 VMUG members
  • There are more VMs created every second than “physical babies” born per second (as opposed to virtual babies?)
  • There are more vMotions per second than planes taking off per second globally
  • Touched briefly on View 5 features: Bandwidth improvements, client ubiquity, and improvements around VoIP/Unified Communications.  Personally I can’t wait for View 5 to get released now that there is better bandwidth controls for PCoIP.

A session I didn’t get into today was VSP3205: Tech Preview for vStorage APIs.  This was a futures session with the general idea of being able to store a VMDK as its own entity on a storage array natively.  I’d highly recommend checking out this post by @scott_lowe for his recap on the session.

The solutions exchange/lounge area is very cool this year, with a park theme and games like volleyball, basketball etc.  Check out this pool on Flickr from HP to get an idea.

Tonight isn’t quite over yet, there is still the #CXIparty with my employer, @NexusMN being one of the sponsors.  I will likely have some camera phone pictures of the event to post tomorrow.

If you aren’t out here, follow me on Twitter and catch some of my updates throughout the conference.

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Are you registered? Raising the Bar, Part V

In case you did, be aware that you also have a chance to win a FREE VMworld pass just by attending the online event.  I have a feeling this is going to be a can’t-miss event in terms of announcements, but with the chance to win a free VMworld pass it’s a no-brainer!

July 12, 2011
9am-Noon Pacific Time

VMware CEO Paul Maritz and CTO Steve Herrod will be presenting on the next generation of cloud infrastructure. Join us and experience how the virtualization journey is helping transform IT and ushering in the era of Cloud Computing.

9:00-9:45 Paul and Steve present – live online streaming
10:00-12:00 five tracks of deep dive breakout sessions
10:00-12:00 live Q&A with VMware cloud and virtualization experts

More details, including the link to register, are available on the VMware blogs page.

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