VMworld

I Don't RTFM and Neither Should You : September 19, 2008

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One of the neatest things I saw at the VMworld 2008 conference was the Jack PC from Chip PC. I've been around for long enough to remember all the hype about thin clients, and the promise that everything would live in the cloud.

Todd is intimately familiar with it, and he'll be more than happy to share his experiences in the early days with the failed NetworkStations :-)

I think this time around all the infrastructure is in place. 10-12 years ago we didn't have the network, nor great technology that exists from VMware and other companies. I think there is a much better chance that VDI, ThinComputing, whatever you want to call it, will take hold.

Great idea to have the Jack PC live in the wall and be powered over ethernet. That wouldn't have been possible 10 years ago. They are supposed to be sending one of their thin clients to all the lab attendees, hopefully it will arrive soon. I've got the spot in the kitchen that will work perfect !

http://www.vmworld.com/vmworld/servlet/JiveServlet/downloadImage/1254/JackPC+from+ChipPC.jpg

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My thoughts on the vCloud

Posted by Scott Hanson Sep 19, 2008


At the VMworld 2008 keynote there was an emphasis on vEverything, and in particular the vCloud. At the high level, the idea is a great one, be able to seamlessly move workloads in and out of the Cloud, no matter where the resources exist in the cloud. My datacenter, your datacenter, their datacenter.

In my previous life I was lucky enough to work on the team at IBM that was engaged in the beginning of the TeraGrid project. A great project with a goal of uniting several academic HPC Cluster sites across the US, so they could share the computational resources.

We thought the biggest challenges would be of a technical nature, turned out the political and trust challenges far outweighed the technical.

How can I trust my data is secure at your site ? Who will have access to the data ? I need admin rights on your site. How do we charge back for your hogging all the bandwidth with your project ?

I would encourage Paul Maritz to meet with the leaders of TeraGrid and discuss those challenges and how they deal with those issues. It's the natural order of the world for us to learn from academia.

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