Friday 28 August 2015

Structure News: Downstream mergers, ARM in China, and cloud tips from Pinterest

STRUCTURE EVENTS Newsletter
 
Where We Welcome Clouds in Summer
August 28th, 2015 / by Tom Krazit
This week, we'll talk about the continuing saga of the EMC "federation," the surprising return of the server market, and how even cloud-native companies can struggle to implement cloud infrastructure.
STRUCTURE NEWS
NEW FOR STRUCTURE 2015: WORKDAY’S DAVID CLARKE


Scaling is hard: it's probably one of the most consistent problems that Structure attendees have described throughout the years and it's made even harder by the unique workloads used across different companies. We're pleased to announce that Workday's David Clarke will be joining Structure for the first time to speak about these and other problems on stage. Remember, Structure 2015 will take place November 18th and 19th at the Julia Morgan Ballroom in downtown San Francisco.

You can find more information about the show, including the newly released schedule,
at our site. And you can buy tickets here.
INDUSTRY NEWS
BOARD TAKES SERIOUS LOOK AT VMWARE-LED TAKEOVER OF EMC
This notion surfaced a few weeks ago, but now it appears to have legs. Recode reports that EMC's board is seriously considering a proposal by VMware CEO Pat Gelsinger for a "downstream merger," in which VMware would actually acquire its parent company. Another tidbit from the report: EMC's board has apparently decided that it's time for EMC CEO Joe Tucci to step down by the end of this year, a move he has postponed several times in the past.
 
VMWARE CTO BEN FATHI DEPARTS AS EMC FEDERATION EXECUTIVE EXODUS CONTINUES
 
Something is definitely going on inside the EMC-VMware-Pivotal federation. After Pivotal CEO Paul Martiz decided it was time to step down last week, CRN reports that two prominent VMware executives -- Chuck Hollis and Ben Fathi -- are also moving on. Hollis is going to Oracle, while Fathi is keeping his future plans close to the vest.
 
INSIDE CHINA'S HOMEGROWN 64-CORE ARM BIG IRON CHIP
 
Despite running away with the mobile chip market, ARM-based chips have had a much harder time making progress against Intel in the server market. The Platform takes a detailed look at the 64-bit 64-core server processor announced this week by little-known Phytium Technology of China that, assuming it can actually get the ARM-based chip into the market, might make Intel pay closer attention.
 
REPORTS SAY WORLDWIDE SERVER SALES INCREASED IN THE SECOND QUARTER
 
Speaking of servers, the cloud may not have eroded the traditional server vendors just yet. Fortune reports that server sales were stronger than expected in the second quarter, with HP and Dell leading the way at IBM's expense.

OPENSTACK COMPANY MIRANTIS TAKES ON $100M ROUND LED BY INTEL CAPITAL
 
Intel's interest in OpenStack continues to build this year. Venturebeat notes that the chip maker has put $100 million into Mirantis after teaming up with Rackspace on the OpenStack Innovation Center earlier this year.
 
GOOGLE HOPES OPEN SOURCE WILL GIVE ITS CLOUD A PATH TO THE ENTERPRISE
 
If Google really wants to compete against AWS and Microsoft in the public cloud market, it's going to have to get better at courting enterprises. Techcrunch reports that Google's Craig McLuckie (love that name) discussed the situation quite candidly at an OpenStack event this week, believing that open sourcing more of Google's infrastructure software could help.
BIG PICTURE
Vinod Khosla





















I had a chance this week to catch up with Raj Patel, the man in charge of infrastructure for Pinterest (and Structure 2015 speaker), and talk shop about the state of the public cloud and Pinterest's challenges in scaling its infrastructure to handle its growth. Pinterest is a relatively shy company compared to the "unicorns" that have emerged over the last few years, but it has plenty of compelling projects and challenges to talk about later this year.

Over the course of our conversation, one thing Patel said particularly stuck with me. Pinterest is a native cloud company, built on AWS and it still runs entirely on AWS. We were talking about the challenges a lot of older companies face in transitioning workloads to the cloud, and Patel pointed out that even Pinterest found itself having to retrain some engineers and develop clear procedures for operating in a cloud-first environment, simply because old habits die hard as you bring more veteran infrastructure people into an organization.

That thought gave me pause: if even cloud-native companies like Pinterest have to continually re-orient themselves around making sure they are developing infrastructure and apps with the cloud in mind, then it's going to take an awful lot of time and education for older companies with established workflows to make the shift. And cloud vendors might have to find ways to work better together to let IT organizations gradually shift their workloads into this new era of enterprise computing.

I'll be back soon with a more detailed account of our conversation, which touched on containers, open source projects, and the datacenter tipping point. For now, Raj advised keeping two things in mind if you're plotting a transition to the cloud: Understand what you can't control, and develop apps under the assumption that infrastructure is ephemeral.

(Photo Credit: ShardsOfBlue via Compfight cc)
 
 
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Friday 21 August 2015

Structure News: Lightning strikes, Salesforce hikes, and Mee, too

STRUCTURE EVENTS Newsletter
 
Where The Schedule Is Set
August 21st, 2015 / by Tom Krazit
This week, we'll talk about the negative effects of lighting strikes on data centers, the rise of the "algorithm economy," and meet the new boss at Pivotal.
STRUCTURE NEWS
STRUCTURE 2015: CHECK OUT THE SCHEDULE
Structure 2015 is three months away, and the schedule is ready to help you make your plans. We've already announced a bunch of speakers who will be appearing at the Julia Morgan Ballroom, but new highlights include Florian Leibert, CEO of Mesosphere, Mike Krieger, co-founder of Instagram, and Mark Shuttleworth, founder of Canonical.

INDUSTRY NEWS
GOOGLE LOST CUSTOMER DATA BECAUSE OF REPEATED LIGHTNING STRIKES
So much for the legend that lightning doesn't strike twice in the same place. Slate reports on a Google data center in Belgium that experienced some drive failures after four consecutive lightning strikes, resulting in the loss of a tiny amount of customer data. Expect AWS and Microsoft to tout "five lightning-strike reliability" in their next marketing push.

ORACLE IS 'TOO OPTIMISTIC ON PROFITABILITY OF THE CLOUD BUSINESS' ACCORDING TO THIS ANALYSIS

The shift from software licensing to software subscriptions may not allow big enterprise software vendors to enjoy the margins they once did. Business Insider looks at a study by Citi that predicted it would take Oracle eight to 10 years to make as much profit from cloud software (assuming it continues to scale that business) as it does from software licenses.

PULLING BACK THE CURTAIN ON GOOGLE'S NETWORK INFRASTRUCTURE

Google was one of the first big web companies to embrace a roll-your-own infrastructure strategy, largely overseen by Structure 2015 speaker Urs Hölzle. This week Google released a paper showing how the networking part of that infrastructure evolved over five generations, giving network geeks a nice look into how Google thinks about this vital cog in the machine.

IDF 2015: INTEL WOOS DEVELOPERS TO BUILD FOR THE ALGORITHM ECONOMY

It was a busy week for Intel and Structure 2015 speaker Diane Bryant, as they held their annual Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco. ZDNet looks at one of the key themes Bryant discussed, which is that the growth of the internet of things is going to generate massive amounts of data that will require new types of algorithms to organize and make sense of that data.

EARNINGS REPORTS: SALESFORCE POSTS STRONG REVENUE GROWTH, HP REVENUE DOWN

Guess which company has a strong cloud computing business. HP continues to struggle as it gets ready to split itself into two pieces, reporting a drop in revenue and profits for the quarter and lowering its full-year forecast. Salesforce, meanwhile, reported a 24 percent jump in revenue, although it roughly broke even for the quarter.
BIG PICTURE
 
Although most of us see cloud computing as the inevitable future of enterprise computing, it's not easy for people and companies with decades of experience from a different era to make the shift. Pivotal has had a great deal of success helping companies adjust and embrace the cloud, and the key person behind that effort, CEO Paul Maritz, announced this week that he's stepping down from that position to become chairman of the company. Rob Mee (pictured above), who was executive vice president of Pivotal Labs and is a co-founder of the company along with Maritz.

Any time a company changes CEOs there's a tendency to assume something was amiss, but in this case it seems like a rather orderly transition, with Pivotal smartly choosing to announce that it expects to do $100 million in bookings for Cloud Foundry this year alongside the news of Maritz's departure. Mee's tenure at the company also suggests that Pivotal's employees are pretty familiar with his style.

But these are still interesting times for Pivotal and its "federation" partners, EMC and VMware. Joe Tucci, CEO of EMC and considered the godfather of the federation, is 67 and has vacillated on the prospect of retirement before, although earlier this year he said he's not thinking about the shuffleboard and early-bird special lifestyle just yet. Maritz, who was once CEO of VMware and an executive at EMC, had been seen as a likely successor but said this week that his "operational career is over."

And as Adam Lashinsky of Fortune noted following the news of Mee's promotion, this might be an ideal time for EMC to bring VMware and Pivotal fully into the fold, consolidating the three-headed monster into one corporation. As we noted in this newsletter a few weeks ago, according to reports EMC has at least considered a "downstream merger," in which it would be acquired by VMware.

These will certainly be tricky waters for Mee to navigate. But there's still a huge amount of potential for Pivotal's services as the world shifts to the cloud, and if he can keep the company growing at this pace, the balance of power in the federation could shift.

 
 
 
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Wednesday 19 August 2015

CIO of the NFL to speak at Structure

STRUCTURE
REGISTER NOW
 
While some of our favorite speakers like Urs Hölzle, Diane Bryant and Vinod Khosla will be returning to Structure, we are equally excited to introduce new speakers who will shine a vastly different perspective on the cloud industry as we know it. 

Michelle McKenna-Doyle, CIO of the NFL:
  • Technology expert at a professional sports league, in particular, one that is obsessed with stats, data and technology
  • A woman working in a predominately male profession, in a predominately male sports league
  • Has a wide spectrum of experience ranging from entertainment to energy
  • Represents a melting pot of cloud infrastructure needs: data, analytics, broadcasting, production, and increasingly health and wellness technology for players
Michelle joins a lineup of expert speakers from Intel, Google, Pinterest, Puppet Labs, GE and more on November 18-19th in San FranciscoSee the full schedule here.

Snag your ticket early and save.

Want to bring the whole team? Email us for group rates.
 
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PARTNERS
 
 
STRUCTURE
NOVEMBER 18 – 19, 2015
SAN FRANCISCO, CA
 
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Tuesday 18 August 2015

Full Circle Newsletter

Gigaom Full Circle Newsletter
View this email in your browser
Scientists Recreate Human Serotonin 18/08/15
Brain Power The Human Network
Interview with Stephen Wolfram on AI and the Future Google Rebrands Itself as a New Company Called Alphabet
Futurism Reconstructed
From ATMs to AIs, the Robots are Coming First 3D-Printed Pill Approved by US Authorities
Robotics 3-Dimensional
NASA Builds 3D-Printed Space Drone
A Study In The Interconnectedness Of Things

Scientists grow human serotonin neurons in petri dish

For the first time ever, University of Buffalo researchers have created human serotonin: the precious neurotransmitter linked to depression. 
 

Until now, the inability to obtain live human serotonin to study neurological illnesses has limited serotonin research to lab animals.

According to researchers, these findings may be applied to other previously inaccessible human cell types. 

"Our work demonstrates that the precious serotonin neurons hidden deep inside the human brain can now be created in a petri dish," said lead author Jian Feng, PhD, professor in the Department of Physiology and Biophysics in the UB School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences.

Find more information at MedicalXpress.com.

The Human Network

Google is now Alphabet

It's not often that a company with a market cap of over $400 billion announces a massive operational restructuring plan that will undoubtedly hog the public conversation in tech social circles for months to come. Yet, that's exactly what Google did today.

Under terms of the restructuring plan announced today by Larry Page, Google is rebranding itself as a new company called Alphabet. The core Google products you've come to know and love — YouTube, Android, Google Search, Gmail, Chrome, and Maps — aren't getting the new branding but they will operate as a single unit under the Alphabet umbrella. The move, according to Page, is intended to provide more transparency to the company's quarterly operations while also allowing Alphabet to better focus on other large entities such as Nest, Calico, Google X Incubator, and more.
 
"Our company is operating well today, but we think we can make it cleaner and more accountable," Page wrote, adding that he'll stay on as CEO of Alphabet while fellow cofounder Sergey Brin assumes the role of president. "Fundamentally, we believe this allows us more management scale, as we can run things independently that aren't very related."

Continue reading at Gigaom.com

Reconstructed

The US FDA Approves the World's First 3D Printed Pill

The US Food and Drug Administration has authorized the production of a 3D-printed pill created by Aprecia Pharmaceuticals.

The new pill called Spritam was developed to control seizures brought on by epilepsy. The use of 3D-printing allows the layers of medication to be packaged more tightly in precise dosages. 

The FDA has previously approved other medical devices to be 3D printed including prosthetics. Aprecia Pharmaceuticals has plans to develop other medications using its 3D platform. 

Aprecia Pharmaceuticals also developed a technology called ZipDose that makes it easier to swallow high dosages. Printing the drug allows a single table to hold up to 1,000 milligrams and dissolve similarly to other oral medicines. 

Find more information at BBC.com

3-Dimensional

NASA 3D Prints Space Drone to Explore Mars


NASA Blog Editor Steven Siceloff announced that Swamp Works engineers at NASA's Kennedy Space Center are inventing an extreme access flyer tasked with gathering samples from other planets. These drones will be able to access areas on other worlds that are currently inaccessible to rovers. 

Siceloff explains, "The vehicles – similar to quad-copters but designed for the thin atmosphere of Mars and the airless voids of asteroids and the moon – would use a lander as a base to replenish batteries and propellants between flights."
 
According to Swamp Works Senior Technologist Rob Mueller, "This is a prospecting robot..The first step in being able to use resources on Mars or an asteroid is to find out where the resources are. They are most likely in hard-to-access areas where there is permanent shadow. Some of the crater walls are angled 30 degrees or more, and that's far too steep for a traditional rover to navigate and climb."

Continue reading at NASA.gov.

Robotics

The Robots Are Coming

The Argus Leader devotes a week to debating the evolution of automation, robotics, artificial intelligence, and its impact on the workforce. 

 
This week Steve Young of The Argus Leader is taking an in-depth look at robotics as it applies to the human workforce.  

Young explains, "But just as the evolution of electricity helped to propel the nation through the Second Industrial Revolutio
n more than a century ago, the technological wizardry that has brought Siri to our cell phones and 'recalculating to our highway lexicon promises to be just as transformative."

Based in Souix Falls, The Argus Leader will focus on technology's impact on their largest industries: manufacturing, health care, financial services, and retail services. Young asks, "Could robots do the welding, the assembly line work and the other lower-level repetitive jobs that companies seem to have such a difficult time filling?"

"Some people, like Silicon Valley software developer Martin Ford, are telling me that advances in robotics and artificial intelligence will eventually make a large fraction of our human workforce obsolete."


Continue reading at Argusleader.com.

Futurism

Interview with Stephen Wolfram on AI and the Future

Stephen Wolfram is a distinguished scientist, technologist and entrepreneur. He has devoted his career to the development and application of computational thinking. 
 

Byron Reese: So when do you first remember hearing the term "artificial intelligence"?
 
Stephen Wolfram: That is a good question. I don't have any idea. When I was a kid, in the 1960s in England, I think there was a prevailing assumption that it wouldn't be long before there were automatic brains of some kind, and I certainly had books about the future at that time, and I'm sure that they contained things about them, how there would be some electronic brains, and so on. Whether they used the term "artificial intelligence," I'm not quite sure. Good question. I don't know.
 
Would you agree that AI, up there with space travel, has kind of always been the thing of tomorrow and hasn't advanced at the rate we thought they would?
 
Oh, yes. But there's a very definite history. People assumed, when computers were first coming around, that pretty soon, we'd automate what brains do just like we've automated what arms and legs do, and so on. Nobody had any real intuition for how hard that might be. It turned out, for reasons that people simply didn't understand in the '40s, and '50s, and '60s, that lots of aspects of it were quite hard, and also, the specific problem of reproducing what human brains choose to do may not be the right problem. Just like if you want to build a transportation system, having it based on legs is not the best engineering solution. There was an assumption that we can automate brains just like you can automate mechanical kinds of things, and it's only a matter of time, and in the early '60s, it seemed like it would be a short time, but that turned out not to be true, at least for some things.

Read the full interview at Gigaom.com
Brain Power
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