Cloud Boom Drives Sales Boom For Physical Servers 94
jfruh writes: The promise of the cloud is that your storage and computing problems will be abstracted away from messy physical objects that you need to maintain, taken care of far way by other people. Well, it turns out that those other people need to buy a lot of servers.
No they don't (Score:5, Funny)
That's because those other people are stupid. They just need to put everything in the cloud!
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So... it's clouds all the way up?
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until you hit God.
I'm hoping it doesn't turn into a Tower of Babel thing. Or something requiring an ark.
Re:No they don't (Score:4, Funny)
That kind of logic leads to everything running on some blackhat's machine. [xkcd.com]
Um, duh? (Score:2, Redundant)
> Well, it turns out that those other people need to buy a lot of servers.
Brought to you by Captain Obvious.
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well that's just silly (Score:3)
Why don't providers just buy storage from the cloud?
Oh, wait.
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Provider one rents their servers from Provider 2. Provider 2 rents their servers from Provider 3. Provider 3 rents their servers from Provider 1.
We have a feedback loop and soon the cloud is a black hole!
I pretty much consider it a black hole already..
Tongue twister title (Score:2)
Sally sells seashells by the seashore?
How many chucks would woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood?
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Re:Tongue twister title (Score:5, Funny)
I think it should be written like:
Cloud. Boom.
Drives Sales. Boom.
For Physical servers. Boom.
Throw in some wikiwiki noises, a phat beat, and some sampling, and you've got a hit record.
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Missing a BurmaShave! somewhere in there.
Re:Tongue twister title (Score:4, Funny)
Sweet! Cheap used hardware in 3... 2... 1... POP! (Score:2)
Great Cloud Bubble you got there. When these site go under, BOOM, cheap rack hardware.
Seriously, I stand to make lots of money doing work for these places, so go on ahead and build out those clouds! I'll find new work when the hype is over. No prob.
Not sure why this article was written (Score:2)
Well, it turns out that those other people need to buy a lot of servers.
I'm trying to understand the purpose of this statement. Cloud services are great. They are used for backup, collaboration and replacement of in-house servers. I would expect demand to increase.
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A lot of nontechnical people don't understand that "moving services to the cloud" is sometimes precisely moving services to someone else's servers in someone else's rack in someone else's datacenter(s).
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A lot of nontechnical people don't understand that "moving services to the cloud" is sometimes precisely moving services to someone else's servers in someone else's rack in someone else's datacenter(s).
I think everyone understands that. How else could it possibly work? The cloud vendors may not be perfect, but they likely have better reliability, better bandwidth, better backups, and better security than a "nontechnical" person could provide for themselves.
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While the cloud provider might have better bandwidth, the non-techie may not.
If I share photos via the cloud (e.g. Dropbox), I upload them once, and then family, friends, etc. can view them dozens of times, using Dropbox's bandwidth, not mine.
I store customer facing content in "the cloud". This includes webpages, images, databases, etc. I only need to upload this content once. Then it is downloaded by others thousands of times. So my cloud vendor needs to have far more bandwidth that I need to have.
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I think everyone understands that. How else could it possibly work?
I think you give nontechnical people more credit than you should. I guarantee there are two people out there right now discussing what happens to their pictures if it rains. One of them probably has an MBA.
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I guarantee there are two people out there right now ...
Two people are not "a lot". The vast majority of people, even non-techies, can understand that if their files are not on their own computer, yet still exist, then they are somewhere else.
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but they likely have better reliability, better bandwidth, better backups, and better security than a "nontechnical" person could provide for themselves.
Another one who doesn't bother to read terms of service.
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Exactly. Or who assumes that SLAs are immutable laws of nature, not promises.
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Sometimes it involves adding capabilities to those services that you didn't have in your own data center, like geographic redundancy.
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The article should have been pointing out that contrary to popular belief centralizing storage in the cloud doesn't mean less equipment. That's really the point of the article. A 1TB of USB storage is now enterprise level storage arrays, enterprise level networking equipment, custom software, backup power, specialized HVAC and staff to run the whole thing.
Convenience and added benefits isn't free and that's probably the part that escapes non tech users.
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What it really means is that it makes many have access to servers that never had them before. Before all these cloud servers showed up, if I wanted to have a place to backup my files to, I would buy another hard drive or backup to DVD. Which means I bought 0 servers. Now with cloud storage services, I just back my stuff up to the cloud. I'm using a certain percentage of a server.
A lot of things that require servers just didn't used to get done, because it wasn't feasible to buy your own personal server f
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The quality of AC's has really gone downhill if they call that hacking now...
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How do you know the cloud servers are backup? Hey, the service providers have to make money *somehow*.
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So at home while I could never afford that $24k server, I could setup my own data storage server with tons of space seeing how drives are cheap these days. You can even build in redundancy as well as hot-swap if you really wanted to.
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What I was trying to point out is that's a useless statement. The article as a whole is almost useless. Obviously if I dispose of 1TB of local storage to replace it with cloud storage ,servers will need to be built. The benefits are such that it may not be a one to one mapping. Getting rid of a 1TB drive doesn't mean you replace it with only 1TB of storage. You actually replace it with enterprise level storage, networking and security devices backed by custom software to wrap it all up.
Was the writer of the
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Excellent point, and good example.
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So what? (Score:2)
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That simply is not true.
The viability of the business model isn't how many servers you have to buy to be a cloud ... it's how much you can gouge your customers for it.
Gouge enough, and it's profitable. Don't gouge enough, and then it's a broken business model.
Pretty much like anything hired as a service.
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Hell prior to a few years ago a cloud was in the sky, not a server in some far away place, some marketing pinhead spoke with a forked tongue to convince people they needed something they had never heard of. Promise the world, contents may differ from images. Real world results may vary.
Gouging, storage costs are less than a dollar a gig these days, you are paying both for that space and the host providers bandwidth to support your use. Gouging.
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@gstoddart: I think you broke the capitalist...
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It's saying that the people hosting cloud servers (and other large-scale computing) are buying more servers. This is an indication that people are doing a lot more computing, as large-scale computing tends to be more efficient due to the ability to load balance among a much larger fraction of users.
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That's not what's happening, they are buying more servers. The types of computational workloads are also shifting during the cloud migrations. The savings are coming from: staffing efficiencies, reduced real estate costs, reduced power costs, reductions in physical security, savings in the procurement process...
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To support 24x7 continuous on demand scalable virtualized converged distributed BYOD mobile business solutions.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
"Weird Al" Yankovic - Mission Statement
Here's one you won't see on /.! (Score:1)
http://arstechnica.com/informa... [arstechnica.com]
Looks like Slashdot Media's subsidiary is a bad netizen. Shame!
Theory says more efficient utilization, but... (Score:5, Insightful)
Theory says that the move to cloud should reduce global demand for servers since each individual company won't have to provide for its own compute & storage capacity overhead and can instead rely on both the "elasticity" and the efficient VM packing/balancing of the cloud.
The reality, however, is that the race to the cloud has cloud providers throwing money into cloud infrastructure and charging customers a pittance compared to the capital investment. This has corporate users of the cloud using more capacity than they otherwise would.
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This could actually be a good thing.
Computing is meant to be used for improving the business process, so more computing may just means more business-related work being done.
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This thing.
Think simply about the ongoing recent improvements to deployment strategies. In the web development world, you used to just load up Filezilla and copy files over to a server. Running a website required a single environment. When you wanted to launch a new website, you created a new server environment and that was it.
In 2015, there is now Docker, Vagrant, Jenkins, VCS, Ansible, Node, Bower, Composer, (and really this list just continues forever) ... It's not a matter of simply installing Apache
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Only until the current tech bubble bursts and the unprofitable cloud providers shut down.
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This is demand driven investment. How could that be a bubble? The bubble can happen later when cloud investment starts to outpace customer demand or even starts to generate its own cross over demand. But right now this is not a bubble this is a success.
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Not in all cases. I manage a five figures monthly cloud deployment, and I look at the bill every month looking for ways to reduce costs. Using the cloud is cheaper than maintaining our own data center, before even considering how capital intensive it would be to carry around unused resources ourselves.
If I had to have enough spare resources to handle our occasional traffic spikes, I'd have to spend an extra $100,000 upfront for hardware that would sit around doing nothing almost all the time. But when our t
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A pittance. we run 10vms on a single R720 which cost 15k and will last us 5 years and requires a few hours maintain economic a month. Way cheaper than 'the cloud'
Thunder (Score:2)
A cloud boom is called "thunder."
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When it rains it pours....
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You guys talk as though they're be hail to pay.
Traditional or white-box? (Score:4, Insightful)
One thing to note is that "hyperscale public clouds" like Amazon, Microsoft and Google don't use off-the-rack HP, Lenovo or Dell hardware. They're using Open Compute Project-style designs contracted out to whitebox vendors. So, where's the demand for name brand servers coming from?
Even though we use virtualization extensively, everything is still in house. I wonder how much of a dent public cloud is actually making in corporate server infrastructure. Sure, some web startup supporting a phone app is a perfect use case for the cloud...but does it meet the needs of most companies?
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If I'm building and selling an app on someones app store, I'll have already hired a hosting provider, you know the guys that were cloud before it was cloud.
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Interesting callousness towards those maintaining (Score:1)
The promise of the cloud is that your storage and computing problems will be abstracted away from messy physical objects that you need to maintain, taken care of far way by other people that are not well treated for their work.
At least the first mainframe era had some respect for the people involved in the infrastructure. These days, globalization has killed it in favor of mistreatment and abstraction of the workforce.
We're still in the interval of Heroin Pricing.... (Score:2)
Heroin dealers make the first few hits free or really cheap because when you still have a choice, they need to sell you on it. After you're seriously addicted, the price can be raised because you no longer have the ability to say no.
Similarly, even if it means losing money for a while, cloud providers have to make the cost per unit of compute per hour look very attractive and practically give it away at first, so your IT and Line-Of-Business groups at your firm think cloud is much cheaper than all that phy
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> Heroin dealers make the first few hits free or really cheap because when you still have a choice, they need to sell you on it. After you're seriously addicted, the price can be raised because you no longer have the ability to say no.
I always wondered if you could circumvent this by getting all of your friends to solicit free or really cheap hits.
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Sounds like I'm in the wrong business....
Cloud services are pretty much fungible... If provider A tries to turn the thumbscrews, provider B will just under cut them in price and customers will switch in droves the next time the service contract comes up for renewal.
What will actually happen (if it's not already) is that a small number of larger cloud service providers will corner the market and drive the smaller and less efficient providers into mergers, consolidation or just plain out of business. You w
It also screws with the IT staff too. (Score:1)
The workers that actually have to deal with it are further screwed - contract labor makes things as healthy and stable as being next to a malfunctioning nuclear reactor. Long-term anything goes out the window and compensation is made on worse terms.
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There are a couple of problems with your theory, though it could play out that way. Right now the smaller vendors are often more efficient than the larger ones. Smaller players can be more nimble.
Second the larger players all have vastly different models. Just to pick a few examples of the bigger players
AWS -- Generic low quality server experience offered cheaply. Walmart
Sungard -- Highly custom environments quality management lots of value added labor
Verizon (was Terremark) -- Moderately custom environ
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Also, heroin becomes twice as addictive every 18 months.
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Not really a problem for two reasons....
1. HUGE data generally requires processing power to sort though, so where it might be cheaper to by shares of some data center's pile of rack mounted servers, once you get to a certain size, building your own makes financial sense. I'm guessing, but it sure seems to me that if you are big enough to be worried about how long it takes to move your data, you will have it locally processed anyway and won't be dependent on a cloud provider.
2. Data has value that is larg
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The crossover between tricky to move is much lower than the crossover for better to run your own datacenter. Not necessarily the case though for better to run your own cloud out of someone else's colo or better to jointly administer a cloud with a colo provider. So this can happen. The cost of multiple good quality data centers is very very high compared to the cost of getting data out of one.
As far as GP's post. He's wrong. First off clouds are designed to scale so adding another copy of parts of the
oblig xkcd... (Score:2)
oh c'mon, you knew someone would post it [xkcd.com].
I hate reporting like this... (Score:5, Interesting)
" HP wasn’t able keep up with its competitors. The company’s revenue share dropped from 25.5 percent to 23.8 percent, while its market share by volume dropped 2.6 percentage points to 20 percent, "
For anyone keeping score, this statement means 'HP is not keeping up because they are still in the lead, but the gap is narrower'.
"Dell increased revenue and shipments, but it too wasn’t quite able to keep up with the market. Its share of revenue and shipments each slipped by just under 1 percentage point to 17.1 percent and 19 percent respectively"
This is a little less blatantly wrong, but Dell is the #2 vendor Strictly true since they said keep up with *the market* which in aggregate grew, but being #2 in the market isn't such a dire thing.
" IBM had the third-largest server revenue, followed by Lenovo and Cisco Systems, while Lenovo was third by server shipments, "
This particular statistic is pretty screwed up because it doesn't correct for the situation that IBM sold of x86 based servers partway through the year in some parts of the world, and at the end of the year in other parts of the world. It mentions this, but fails to recognize that IBM's situation partially included Lenovo still. Lenovo's big year to year growth is mostly a changing of ownership currently.
"Cisco’s year-over-year server revenue growth of 44.4 percent was well above average for the industry, and suggests the company is not done capturing incremental market share in the server market"
Impressive and all, but given *after* that increase they still lag behind 4 other companies, it means that big year to year percentages are likely. Just like the lead experiencing a little crowding in a market shouldn't cause anyone to write them off, a large percentage gain by a relatively small player shouldn't send everyone into an excited state. You could write similarly exciting stories about some of the 'lower tier' vendors, but since those aren't exciting brands, they got omitted.
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Let's call it a cloud burst and let it go..
What's happening is providers have entered an era where the supply of the product (cloud services) has saturated the market and the low volume, high overhead operations cannot stay in business. It's the natural "survival of the fittest" phase where the overpopulation of folks providing this service are being weeded down to the handful who will survive.
Like the Hula-Hoop, tickle-me-Elmos and Pet Rock, the fad is reaching it's peak and it's down hill from here. S
Buy More! (Score:1)