Posts Tagged ‘Dell Cloud Server’

Ubuntu Servers Now Offered by Dell

Thursday, February 3rd, 2011

The Dell PowerEdge C2100 and C6100 servers have now been outfitted with Canonical’s Ubuntu Enterprise Cloud (UEC), an implementation of the Eucalyptus private cloud software.  This is run by the Ubuntu Server Edition operating system.  These two servers are specifically customized to run Ubuntu-based cloud services.

In the suggested setup, the C2100 server acts as a cloud compute node, while the C6100 can act either as a cloud compute server or as both a server and a node.  Dell specifically set up these servers to organizations developing applications to run on Amazon Web Services (AWS). Organizations could use the servers to test the applications locally before uploading them to Amazon’s paid service. The servers have a preconfigured testing and development environment. Eucalyptus duplicates the AWS APIs (application programming interfaces).

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Cloud Computing Is Helping Drive Hardware Growth

Wednesday, August 4th, 2010

Private cloud hardware spending will draw public cloud hardware spending, IDC predicts. IDC also forecasts that server hardware revenue for public cloud computing will grow from $582 million in 2009 to $718 million in 2014, and server hardware revenue for the larger private cloud market will grow from $2.6 billion to $5.7 billion in the same period.

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There have been tons of surveys out there that show that enterprise companies are moving to cloud computing and are looking to move to private clouds first, which means many new boxes of servers are showing up in the lobby to build these private clouds. That said, I believe that some of these so-called private clouds are just relabeled traditional data center and won’t have many built-in cloud computing features beyond simple virtualization.  Since there is no standard in cloud computing, you can’t know if they are true cloud servers or not.

Another point to bring up is VC funding behind cloud computing has significantly gone up.  There isn’t a week that goes by that you don’t hear about a VC fund investing in the cloud computing arena. This causes a significant spike in the number of machines being purchased in the tech sector.  Cloud servers aren’t cheap either. Basically what I’m saying with this whole thing is cloud computing isn’t going anywhere, and cloud server costs aren’t going to go down, I only see them going up!

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HostingCon 2010 Final Stop: The Dell Booth

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010

Yesterday was the final day at HostingCon 2010 in Texas. Above is a photo of us at the Dell booth at HostingCon 2010. We had a wonderful chat with some of the most brilliant minds at Dell.  It’s amazing what Dell has accomplished in the past couple years.  We have established a relationship over the past year as a Certified Dell Vendor and a Dell Storage Enterprise Partner.  In other words, we love Dell.

Andy Rhodes was the keynote on Tuesday.  This was one of our favorite keynotes we have ever been to.  Andy serves as the Director of Global Marketing of Data Center Solutions (DCS) at Dell, Inc. The DCS division is responsible for providing customized infrastructure (server & storage) solutions to the world’s largest scaled out datacenter environments, often referred to as Cloud computing centers. Customers include Microsoft (Azure) and Facebook as well as many Chinese Web2.0 companies. His organization is responsible for strategy, product planning, product management and go to market messaging.

It was a great speech to say the least.  Andy presented a list of lessons Dell has learned over the past few years. “They were buying and deploying devices on a scale never seen before,” Rhodes said, noting that it forced Dell to re-examine some of its ideas on IT services.

One of the main points in his speech was that each business will have a unique TCO model. “Your TCO model will depend on processes,  everyone starts from different starting points,” Rhodes said. Rhodes’ next point is that forward-looking businesses aren’t satisfied with the status quo. “There’s been a massive change in infrastructure” going from large servers to blades, and now we’ve in the age of shared infrastructure and cloud computing, he said. These companies have had to deal with an accelerated pace of change. Not adapting soon enough, and delays in rolling out solutions can, therefore, cost companies dearly. “An enemy of progress is the status quo.”]

His final point I loved: Instead of talking about the term cloud, they should talk to their customers about real pain points and how to solve them. “Get away from that word, it’s not a valuable marketing commodity… customers want to know what it can do for their business.”

GREAT SPEECH, it really hit home with us at Best Cloud Server.  We had a chance to speak with him later and talked about all the unique pain points that Dell is helping cloud hosting providers with.  They help with building unique servers that fit the special requirements that we all have.  They can help build a server specific to your cloud server needs and requirements.

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