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DAILY NEWS AND INFORMATION FOR THE GLOBAL GRID COMMUNITY / MAY 26, 2003: VOL. 2 NO. 21
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Special Features:
GRIDS: NOT A CHEAP DATE
Most businesses agree that computing on demand, grid computing and utility
computing provide much excitement for the new millennium, and most believe it
provides a sound value proposition, though it's not an easy or inexpensive one
to achieve.
These new business concepts represent a basic shift in the provisioning of IT
services, through metered use of computer services, supplied from a utility-
like grid, rather than selling customers discreet IT solutions for every need.
It is not surprising that it has been met with the usual mix of near-religious
fervour and scepticism. The former reaction is, predictably, evident with
industry vendors, who view it as a choice field to play in, as IT spend
continues to falter.
Understanding its value is easy enough. Although there are different variants
of the on-demand model, the basic premise is metered usage and automated
provisioning of IT services as and when needed. The infrastructure powering
the service includes, as per usual, hardware, operating systems, servers and
applications, which may take the form of a shared computing pool or on-
site/off-site data centre. Its attractiveness lies in operational removal from
the customer and hence, infringement on valuable time.
Customers only interface with technology in the sense of using computing
cycles when they need them. This means they don't have to worry about
acquiring and setting up an infrastructure, expanding and maintaining it, or
consider their security, storage, networks, resilience and other services.
They can get on with running their businesses.
It's a flexible approach. One need not acquire more equipment than necessary
at any given moment. It's also cost-effective. While December may produce peak
computer cycles, May might not. One can take and pay for as much processing
power as needed.
In one possible manifestation of this model, a managed/outsourced/hosting
service provider manages the data centre. Or if one chooses to "use IT as a
business differentiator", in IBM's words, in other words own one's own
infrastructure, one could kit up with as much infrastructure as the busiest
months require, and sell off spare computing power in lean months. Another way
to do it is to pool computing resources in a distributed environment, suitable
for like-minded research entities.
"Whoever has control over the data centre is really irrelevant," says Andrew
Fletcher, Hewlett-Packard SA server spokesman. "The ASP, outsourced or hosted
concepts of using IT are secondary to the vision of an integrated view of the
enterprise IT infrastructure and its metered provisioning, usage and billing."
From complexity to value
The computing on demand model has great attraction for many, because the
complexity and heterogeneity of IT systems in current use at large
enterprises, proponents say, should not be the worry of the enterprise. That
is what the integration, IT resource management and/or hosting partner
offering this service is for.
Complexity of current information systems is probably the chief cause of IT‘s
inability to realise its potential. "With the current layer-upon-layer of
computing platforms in evidence at many large enterprises, this is proving
very difficult," says Dave Austin, Europe, Middle East and Africa field
product marketing manager for Citrix Systems.
"The mainframe wasn't overtaken by the mini computer or client server or the
PC. Wave merely settled on foregoing wave, and hence we have a very complex
scenario at many companies, something CIOs want to simplify and consolidate."
(Citrix champions a whole new market of its own, the access infrastructure
field, which envisions the accessibility of such an integrated enterprise,
anywhere, any time, securely and from any platform, and as such has bearing on
the on-demand world as defined here.)
Perhaps as a result of this inability to see value, and other factors, such as
ever-tighter budgets, the buying public has for some time now put a halt on IT
spend. The main research groups, such as Meta Group and Gartner, expect no
more than 4% growth in worldwide IT spend this year. The recurring litany from
analysts is that customers are concerned with getting more value out of what
they have and will only spend in exceptional cases.
A different angle on the same problem of return on investment is HP's
assertion that CIOs are demanding more accountability and transparency of
business processes, and hence clamour for a closer link to be forged between
IT and business processes. This link, integration into one view of the
enterprise, is a crucial underpinning of the process of becoming ready for
computing on demand.
And extraction of value from existing systems is what the computing on demand
blueprint proposes. Its value lies in the suggestion that what customers
already have (in terms of enterprise systems) should be integrated to provide
a completely transparent computing utility, which can be used at will, with
this use accounted for accurately.
It puts forward a variety of ways in which incumbents and newcomers in
enterprise IT user circles can draw on an integrated pool of IT, either in an
on-site, finished solution, or outsourced.
Does anyone offer it today?
Glibly used, the term computing on demand makes no mention of the utter
complexity that goes into preparing such an environment, the process of
readying customers for it, or the enormous scope of solutions it may entail.
No vendor will deny that we are some years away from mainstream acceptance of
the idea, and of the industry's readiness to offer it. According to Gartner,
"policy-based computing will become mainstream in 2005".
Many IT vendors, especially the traditional end-to-end hardware, software and
services companies like IBM, Sun Microsystems and HP, have made noises in this
regard for a few years now. Each can lay claim to some form of leadership, and
are in particularly good positions to offer utility computing, given their
"total solutions" capabilities, ie hardware, services, consulting and
operating system expertise.
In this regard, Dave Botha, IBM marketing executive, remarks that full-house
vendors have the best chance to pull off this end-vision of computing. This is
because of the horizontal integration capabilities the giants possess, and the
many environments they play in. "A consortium will find it difficult to
project manage such a complex venture," he says.
IBM invested $10 billion in what it calls e-business on demand (EBOD) last
year, according to spokespersons its largest infrastructural bet on the future
yet. It has at its basis the value proposition that "agile" organisations of
whatever size should be able to respond quickly to competitive threats and
market opportunities while getting on with their knitting. EBOD will provide a
flexible, variable, resilient and secure environment, customers are told, but
IBM is not about to make it sound easy, or cheap. "We are currently in the
integration phase of all the IT components in some customers, and this takes
time," he says.
Botha adds that since most applications are written to middleware these days,
integration can be an easier task than before, but many companies running on
legacy systems have a rather tougher road ahead of them.
IBM's pet project, running alongside the EBOD direction, is called eLiza. It
is about "autonomic computing", and seeks to develop "self-healing"
technology, which in turn promises resilience, security and flexibility –
without the customer having to worry about acquiring or maintaining any of it.
Hewlett-Packard quotes Gartner Forum findings, which state that the company
has a head start on the competition of some 18 months. Last week, it tied up
an on-demand portfolio of 12 solutions, some of which have been in existence
for years, says spokesman Andrew Fletcher, calling the initiative HP Adaptive
Enterprise.
Sun says it is in an advanced pilot project status in North America, but Jan
Dry, Sun SA spokesman, admits the concept is nowhere near to mainstream
acceptance, nor will many customers be ready to step into such a framework
today.
This hasn't stopped other vendors from getting on the bandwagon too. Veritas
has made its own announcements in this regard.
Better known as a storage management software-maker, Veritas Software will
soon release products from two acquired companies, "which further its plans to
provide more on-demand computer services". Veritas' purchase of Precise
Software Solutions gives it products that detect performance problems, and
with Jareva Technologies, it offers server automation tools, allowing users to
move servers between applications based on demand.
In the second half of this year, Veritas plans to ship its service manager
software that will help companies more precisely track and allocate technology
costs.
Citrix Systems' Metaframe suite of tools providing integrated access to
enterprise resources are mirrored to some extent in other vendors' computing
on demand efforts too. Managing enterprise resources is approached by HP with
its OpenView's suite, by IBM with Tivoli, Computer Associates with Unicenter
and Sun with Grid Engine software.
Computer Associates last week unveiled its strategy for on-demand computing
and introduced new network management products to support it. Through
Unicenter, CA promises on-demand computing benefits without requiring a
complete overhaul of infrastructure (owing to its interoperability claims).
The vendor's network, security and storage management products will support
the effort.
While CA claims cross-platform capabilities, HP and other vendors profess that
their efforts will also include interoperability.
Finally, local start-up WebTec is delivering and signed a US distribution
agreement for its subscription-based software, which it says offers time-based
use of and charging for software, as well as managed services. The company
also offers application management, invoicing, payment collection and bills
customers automatically. The flexibility this provides will suit customers
whose licensing requirements change before the traditional option of annual
renewal becomes available, or those who need software for once-off projects
only.
WebTec does not offer an application service provider option, saying it is too
bandwidth-intensive, and does not assuage customers' security fears.
The company will, like all the above vendors, market its solution to a channel
of service providers, including Internet service providers and managed service
providers as well as systems integrators.
Sun, IBM and HP's blueprints
So, who are the more vocal vendors in this area?
In Sun's case, its data centre architectural blueprint is called N1, which
much like every other serious computing on demand provider, makes the data
centre work like a single system; in other words provides one logical
computing pool. "It turns once-isolated resources into one pool of virtual
resources, so they can be re-allocated in minutes and used in more flexible
ways. Further, N1 does this over a wide array of heterogeneous devices from
Sun and other vendors," says Sun's Dry.
The N1 architecture makes first mention of the stages that precede computing
on demand. They are:
- Foundation resources (infrastructure);
- "Virtualisation" (the software-based "tying up" of all resources, of whatever description, in one place for seamless access);
- Provisioning (mapping business services onto the virtual resource pool, ie
capturing all service requirements, describing them in software and
implementing design from resources);
- Policy (rules defining performance objectives for a service) and
automation; and
- Monitoring (of usage on a per-service basis, not on a per-box basis, which
makes for more accurate accounting and management generation).
IBM is starting to deliver some components related to its autonomic computing
vision (self-managing infrastructure), including technology formerly known as
Storage Tank, according to reports. The components include a number of storage
virtualisation applications, shown publicly for the first time last week.
The products enable scalable and secure management of data storage and
migration, transitioning to virtualised storage and pooling of storage
capacity from non-like array vendors into a single file space. This technology
is a complete virtualisation solution.
The company acknowledges that virtualisation technology requires a leap of
faith on the part of customers before they will bring it into their data
centres.
It says self-configuring may be initiated to adjust allocation of resources or
in response to faults, during run-time or at booting (its self-healing
aspect), and is important when automatically providing IT services as needed.
Products put forward by IBM to help customers move towards autonomic
capabilities include WebSphere Application Server, for building of e-business
applications; Tivoli software, to manage infrastructure; Storage Server, code-
named Shark, to allow customers to more easily configure their systems and
manage their information.
HP advocates the adaptive enterprise and an IT consolidation journey towards a
computing utility. HP's Fletcher says collocating, integrating hardware, data
and applications are all necessary steps toward building a truly "adaptive
infrastructure".
"The first key element in achieving IT utility involves combining
technologies, products, services and solutions to deliver and support a
continuously available environment, ensuring the stability and efficiency of
your business in the face of change. You maintain service levels while you
reduce costs," says Fletcher.
"The second key element is the ability to match resource capacity to service
demands in real-time (mapping business processes to IT services).
"The third key element is the ability to monitor and control resource health,
track use, and report on infrastructure operations that impact the business.
When a system has a single management station, overall management of the
cluster is significantly simpler – further decreasing downtime."
Fletcher says HP's IT consolidation services will help in this regard, from
assessing goals and needs, with an IT consolidation value workshop, to
developing an investment justification and architectural blueprint, to
detailed design, implementation and ongoing management and support.
Ignore it at your peril
Computing on demand provides clear value as an end-vision of IT, which will
become a utility from which customers draw computing power. Its attraction
lies in that IT's complexity, cost, maintenance and suitability should not be
the concern of customers.
However, this clear value belies the complexity that goes into it. Customers
could need up to five years to ready their current systems for it, the end-to-
end vendors are in different stages of a full enterprise offering, and one
could expect this to be mainstream only in a few years' time.
However, to ignore computing on demand could be disastrous. Whatever your
company's size, the preponderance of information today means companies must
increasingly react to any opportunities and threats with alacrity, rather than
with the ponderous stealth that comes with managing a complex, heterogeneous
environment by oneself.
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