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Home Archives for DevOps
HPE have a new angle on managing today’s Hybrid Multicloud World

October 25, 2019 By David Terrar

HPE have a new angle on managing today’s Hybrid Multicloud World

Everyone’s talking digital transformation in today’s volatile, uncertain. complex and ambiguous business landscape.   We all want our organisations to keep relevant, reinvent themselves and avoid going the way of a Thomas Cook or a Kodak.  To support the transformational change that’s required enterprises have been talking app modernisation for a while, and moving business processes to the Cloud, sometimes “as is” and sometimes by redeveloping them from scratch.  Today, both in terms of cost and agility, using Cloud technology for new developments is a given, but for most organisations there is no one right Cloud.  We live in a Hybrid Cloud World whether we like it or not.  Depending on the size of your organisation, from medium to large, according to the Rightscale State of the Cloud survey, you might be dealing with 5 different Clouds, along with the business critical systems you are, most likely, still running in your data centre.  Even a born in the Cloud start up usually has more than just one Cloud/SaaS platform to drive their business.  There is no single Cloud platform that has all the answers, and the three major Public Cloud providers are adding features and functions to their platforms continuously.  How do we manage that Multicloud challenge?  There is no one answer to that either, but a few days ago I heard HPE’s new angle on looking at the problem from the data layer, which ought to be the starting point for thinking about business solutions in any case.  

The ingredients of their solution, in my mind, involve a combination of data abstraction and 3 Cs – Cloud, Containers and Choice.  Let me explain their product and what I mean in a little more detail.

HPE Cloud Volumes

HPE explained their new Cloud Volumes series of data and management services at a workshop run by Nick Dyer, their Field CTO for Nimble and Intelligent Storage, and Tony Stranack, their EMEA Head of Information and Data Strategies.  The problems they are trying to address are common across the Multicloud enterprise. They want to allow portability between the various Public Cloud options and/or on premises hardware so customers can choose the right tool for the job both now, and over time as platforms, circumstances and costs change.  They want to provide those services with enterprise grade resilience and availability.  They want to make the data repository itself easy to manage and in a unified way across the options.  Above all they want to give customers choice and flexibility, whether you are working on existing mission critical apps, or developing new apps with an agile and DevOps mode of develop and deployment.    

Nick asked the question “where is the right place for my data” and then went on to explain that data always has “gravity”.  By that he means that data is bound by the constraints of where and how it was created, and how it is being stored.  Depending on that context, there are various factors “pulling” at that data if and when you want to move it and use it.  

Ingress and Egress  

The biggest pull is Ingress and Egress, now a normal part of our cloud terminology, but why don’t we just say in and out?  Putting my quibble about words aside, we are talking about the costs of getting your data in to and out of the major Cloud provider’s platforms.  For Microsoft Azure, Amazon Web Services and Google Cloud Platform moving your data in to their platform doesn’t cost a thing.  Of course, they charge you for the storage you use, and they hope you stay a long time, but then they charge you when you want to move that data out of their platform, back on premise or to some other destination.  The costs can be significant.

Data Abstraction

With the Cloud Volumes service your data is held in a single repository that is logically connected to your on-premise compute, or to any of the 3 Public Cloud Services.  This brings significant benefits in both time and cost.  Because the data isn’t being physically moved, there are no egress charges and no elapsed time for the data to move.  This gives you all the flexibility and portability between platforms that you need, with the advantage that HPE only bills you for exactly the amount of storage and management services you consume.  

Enterprise Grade Availability

You need enterprise grade security, resilience and availability.  The service uses HPE’s Nimble storage, designed for low latency with 256-bit AES encryption and 99.9999% availability.  

Potential Solutions

The key benefits the approach drives are choice and flexibility.  Cloud Volumes allows you to move workloads and data from on-premises to any cloud (and back) simply and efficiently, helping you avoid being locked in to the first Public Cloud you chose.  It allows you to develop natively in Cloud and deploy on-premises or vice versa.  You could run production on-premises but apply AI and analytics logic in the Cloud adding the ability to scale capacity up and down as necessary.  The service allows you to run multiple instances across several Clouds and on-premises simultaneously.  You could run production on-premises but recover in the Cloud.  It allows you to spin up a new instance to try something in seconds.  

Data Management

Cloud Volumes allows choice on management of the data service too, as well as providing a consistent approach across Cloud and on-premises.  You can use their portal, a Software as a Service based data management approach, as well as command line or cloud first APIs.  The service embraces Docker and Kubernetes to support the kind of Continuous Integration, Continuous Delivery approach to allow you to release more, faster and better – to develop once and deploy anywhere.  

Underpinning the service is HPE’s InfoSight.  This is an AI based tool that analyses and correlates millions of sensors from all of their globally deployed systems.  It constantly watches over your particular environment but has learned from managing the entire HPE customer hardware estate to predict problems.  If it uncovers an issue, it resolves the issue and prevents other systems from experiencing the same problem.  It continuously learns so it gets better and more reliable over time.  It takes the guesswork out of managing infrastructure and simplifies planning by accurately predicting capacity, performance, and bandwidth needs.  Pretty smart. 

Conclusion

Cloud Volumes provides a new angle on the Multicloud management problem that every enterprise faces.  By separating out the data it addresses a key cost and time issue as you are moving your data between platforms logically, not physically.  It simplifies the options for developing new cloud first apps, dealing with mission critical systems, disaster recovery, fail over and more.  It’s a set of tools that helps you choose the right Cloud, use a modern containerised approach, and allow you to change your Cloud or on-premises choice as the cost equation or other factors change.  From what I saw at the workshop it’s well worth exploring, and we hear there will be more announcements around the service coming very soon.  

Check back here once we’ve had that briefing, or contact me if you want more detailed advice now.  

Views from my colleagues who also attended the Cloud Volumes workshop:

  • Richard Arnold’s take
  • Bill Mew interviewed Nick Dyer
  • Ian Moyse thoughts TBA

Hewlett Packard Enterprise is a customer and includes me in their global influencer programme. 

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Filed Under: cloud, Enterprise Cloud Tagged With: AI, analyitcs, app modernization, DevOps, hybrid cloud, InfoSight, multicloud, on premises, private cloud, public cloud, vendor lock in

CIO Transformation Live gets Disruptive in Manchester

May 16, 2019 By David Terrar

CIO Transformation Live gets Disruptive in Manchester

You may know that I’ve been a regular contributor to Trafford Associates CIO events over the last couple of years. I chaired and opened their CIO Transformation Live conference near Silverstone on March 20th this year, and with Andy McLean and the team from Disruptive.Live we amplified the event on the day by live streaming interviews of a dozen of the speakers, sponsors and delegates. It was so successful, we’ve formalised our partnership, and on top of that Trafford and Compare the Cloud/Disruptive.Live have also entered in to a media partnership going forward.

That means the next one at the Manchester Central event space, starting the evening of 17th June, with a full conference day on the 18th will be even more “disruptive”. Andy and I with the Disruptive team will be back live streaming interviews from the evening and the day like before. The agenda aims to bring together CIO’s, IT Directors, CTO’s, CISO’s and IT practitioners for a day full of peer to peer learning, providing the platform to share thought leadership. All of the agenda ideas are generated from the dialogue they have with the delegates as they sign up. They will have some great presentations, panel session and workshops, and the networking breaks are just as important as the content, so delegates will get time to talk and share their ideas. For delegates the conference is free and includes complimentary accommodation on the evening of the 17th.

The content covers the issues you’d expect in terms of the practical application of Digital Transformation, Security, Data & Analytics, Public, Private and Multi-Cloud as well as IoT and AI. However we’ll also be covering the importance of story telling, the need for a start-up mentality and the importance of social collaboration across your organisation.

Additionally, integrating platforms like Practice Path can significantly enhance the capabilities of AdvancedMD Electronic Health Records (EHR) and Practice Management Software as a Service (SaaS) for healthcare practices. Practice Path offers a range of solutions designed to automate processes, improve operational efficiency, and enhance patient experiences, making it a vital tool for modern healthcare organizations looking to stay ahead in a competitive landscape.

At the last conference Dan Brimble, Trafford Associates MD, made a personal commitment to have more diversity in the speaker line up. You’ll see the evidence of that in more women speakers and panelists this time including Sally Eaves CTO and Author at Forbes, Lesley Salmon CIO at Kellogs, and Lulu Laidlaw-Smith Managing Partner at Collaborate2 who also runs the Rip It Up network of disruptors and start-ups. Check out the line up as it comes together.

The other difference, is the newly launched CIO Transformation TV channel. See it here below with it’s rolling programme of interviews from the last event, as well as leading business book authors and motivational speakers. There will be more programming added in the coming weeks and months. It’s the start of something new, and my colleagues at Trafford will be announcing some new initiatives at the show.

If you are interested in coming along, please check out the website, and follow this link to register for a place.

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Filed Under: events, ideas, strategy Tagged With: Agile, app modernisation, CIO, CISO, cloud, CTO, DevOps, hybrid cloud, Manchester, multi cloud

Big Brands talking Enterprise Cloud Computing on 8 May

April 30, 2019 By David Terrar

Big Brands talking Enterprise Cloud Computing on 8 May

I’m looking forward to working for Whitehall Media chairing their Enterprise Cloud Computing Conference next Wednesday 8 May. This is the second time I’ve chaired the London event, which is focused on helping senior IT people set a strategy for DevOps, Cloud and the Data Centre. The event covers an interesting range of topics that are top of mind for today’s CIO, from organisational change required to unite DevOps and Security, to the issue around implementing a cloud platform, to managing the journey from a data centre with monolithic legacy applications to a cloud hosted collection of microservices.

The speakers telling the stories are from Paddy Power Betfair, Debenhams, Royal Mail, Capital One, HSBC Global Banking and Markets, the National Theatre, Vodafone, the Nationwide Building Society and more. They’ll be talking about how to build a business-centric IT department, fast iterative development of applications, and, importantly, how to approach scaling your digital transformation. I’m opening the day with my Director and Deputy Chair of the Cloud Industry Forum hat on, but the closing keynote is from my colleague Alex Hilton, the CIF CEO.

Follow the event on twitter with @WhitehallMedia, and I tweet as @DT, but we’ll be using the event hashtag #wmecc

Here’s are my thoughts on the previous edition:

Hopefully, in between being MC, I can take some notes and write a little that I’ll publish here for those of you that can’t make it. If you are interested in attending or speaking at this kind of event, please get in touch.

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Filed Under: business innovation, digital transformation strategy, Enterprise Cloud, events Tagged With: cloud, data centre, DevOps, hybrid cloud, journey to cloud, micro services, multi cloud

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