Price per CPU/Hour: Sun's COO speaks about his views on Utility Computing
The power of Grid Computing is enabling Tech-Companies to provide multitude of IT services with flexible price models. There has been a lot of research on how Data/Computing virtualization (Data/Compute Sources seamlessly knittted together across administrative boudaries ) can be enabled through a unifying "Grid Services Arcitecture". Take a look at how some of the big companies are trying to cash in with their versions of Grid Provisioning systems.I like the way Sun'COO Jonathan Schwartz plays around with Industry Trends. He writes in his Blog "Now as you probably know, the IT industry is obsessed with "virtualization." It's the buzzword of the day (sorry, couldn't resist). But I wanted to try a new theory - "What would you think," I asked, "if Sun built out a farm of 20,000 CPU's, all running Solaris, divisable into "Trusted" containers? And I sold you the right to use (RTU) an industry standard OS/CPU combination in increments of cpu-hours? Solaris/Opteron or Solaris/SPARC, you pick. We'll run all your Red Hat apps in a Janus partition, and spare you the license cost."
He goes on to say, "Let's keep this simple. We'll provision cpu's by the hour running Solaris Containers. In Siberia, for all I care (to keep cooling/real estate costs low - no offense to our friends in Siberia). And we'll tell our customers - if you have comptutational workloads, that require 10's or 100's or 1,000's of cpu's, for defined periods of time (ie, 5 hours, or 3 days or 3 months) - discrete jobs like rendering a movie, or doing a monte carlo or geophysical simulation, or modeling a protein - then we can run your loads on demand for less than anyone in the industry.........One man's virtualization is another man's web service. The era of mapping workloads to network service infrastructure is officially underway. "
Full version of his blog post available at http://blogs.sun.com/roller/page/jonathan/20040920.
He goes on to say, "Let's keep this simple. We'll provision cpu's by the hour running Solaris Containers. In Siberia, for all I care (to keep cooling/real estate costs low - no offense to our friends in Siberia). And we'll tell our customers - if you have comptutational workloads, that require 10's or 100's or 1,000's of cpu's, for defined periods of time (ie, 5 hours, or 3 days or 3 months) - discrete jobs like rendering a movie, or doing a monte carlo or geophysical simulation, or modeling a protein - then we can run your loads on demand for less than anyone in the industry.........One man's virtualization is another man's web service. The era of mapping workloads to network service infrastructure is officially underway. "
Full version of his blog post available at http://blogs.sun.com/roller/page/jonathan/20040920.
