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GestaltIT.com Seattle Tech Field Day July 2010 – Presentations Overview Part 1 of 2
The Seattle Tech Field Day was actually 2 days. Across those 2 days, the TFD delegates watched 5 presentations from 5 different vendors, plus had a mixer-style dinner with all the vendors. Most of these presentations were storage and virtualization related. Only one vendor, F5 Networks, would be considered to be a networking company, and even their presentation showed some of their fancy new integration with VMware.
Even though the presentations I saw targeted the storage and virtualization guys more than the networking guy (uh, me), all of the products had serious implications for the network. Storage is presented to hosts via iSCSI, CIFS, and NFS. NAS heads with multiple switch ports uplink to the network via MPIO, LACP, and in other ways. Storage arrays could replicate their data across the LAN or across a WAN of various bandwidths and latencies. Some replication schemes WAN optimize themselves, but can still be helped by external WAN accelerators. VMware virtual machines can be moved from one ESX cluster to another using VMotion, which naturally traverses the network, possibly even a WAN link.
What follows is a brief overview of the presentations. Since I’m not yet in deep with storage and virtualization technologies like I am with networking, what I am opting to do is briefly outline each company, and what they presented on. From there, you can click the links to dig in if you want more information.
- Veeam‘s focus is on virtualization environment management, backup, and disaster recovery. Veeam presented on their virtual machine backup and restoration features. I knew nothing about Veeam’s product set before their presentation, and from folks I know who’ve known Veeam for a while, they’ve come a long way in a hurry, making a feature-rich product of great use to VMware shops. The feature that stood out to me the most during the presentation was the ability to instantly bring back up a failed virtual host by starting up the backed up image of the dead production host. While it’s a little like running on “the donut” after experiencing a flat tire in your care, it helps minimize the outage time, while you work on bringing the full virtual host back into production.
Read more about Veeam’s backup product set via the following links:
http://www.veeam.com/vmware-esx-backup.html
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0KB9ktninyc - Nimble Storage was, for me personally, the most interesting presentation. Nimble launched at Tech Field Day, bringing their converged storage, backup, and disaster recovery solution to market. Nimble is targeting the medium business market with 12TB or 24TB raw capacity arrays that include all features with no additional licensing. Nimble has created the CASL (Cache Accelerated Sequential Layout) architecture, which describes how they gain very high IOPS using inline compression and a large adaptive flash cache while writing to high capacity SATA disks (saving overall cost). Nimble is working with resellers starting at the west coast of North America, and moving east. The EMEA market is on their radar for 2011.
Stay tuned for part 2…
Being A GestaltIT.com Tech Field Day Delegate
I am headed to Seattle to participate as a GestaltIT.com delegate in the “Tech Field Day” event July 15+16. Tech Field Day (please read the TFD FAQ to understand the intent) allows vendors to interact with senior engineers in a roundtable format at a technical level and have a dialog about their products. How are the products used? What could be done better? What’s new and exciting coming to the product portfolio? This helps vendors know from a trenches perspective how technology is really implemented (and the challenges faced) in data centers around the world. Engineers get the chance to think about their technology implementations, share what they’re doing that works, and consider other implementations that might work better.
In Seattle, the delegates will hear presentations from F5 (the best load-balancing in the business IMHO, surging past Cisco in market share and still growing), Compellent (storage hardware and software), Veeam (virtualization management and data protection), NEC, and a surprise vendor who will be using Tech Field Day to launch their company.
Look for more posts from Tech Field Day. I plan to blog about all of the vendor’s presentations. The Packet Pushers are also planning this week’s show from Tech Field Day if we can squeeze in the recording time. In case you think I’m going to be acting as a paid commercial, know that although my expenses are covered, I am not getting paid to attend this event. I’m taking personal time away from the workplace to take advantage of what I see as a great opportunity. For me, Tech Field Day is all about my love of technology, learning about companies with innovative ideas, and considering how I can implement that innovation in the companies I am a part of. I can’t think of a better format in which to learn, and I’m looking forward to sharing what I learn with the IT community at large.