Blogs

RedMonk

I’m Back, with a Start: Are You Ready for a 9 Day Sustainability Summit at the Prince of Wales’ Gaff?

So I am back from my holiday in Cornwall – and very nice it was too. But now the Back To School season is kicking in. That means travel, travel and more travel in the runup to Christmas, interspersed with a metric crapload of client consulting. When it comes to item 1 on my agenda though its A London Thing.

I am not sure where the idea came from but Prince Charles and his Charity Foundation have decided to open the gates of his London residence- Clarence House – for Start UK, a sustainability summit and garden party which will last nine days… Yes- *nine days*. IBM meanwhile is running a parallel sustainability event for businesses, each day with its own theme.

The themes are:

Day 1 – Smarter Cities for a Sustainable Future
Day 2 – Smarter Energy for a Sustainable Future
Day 3 – Smarter Transport for a Sustainable Future
Day 4 – People and Skills for a Sustainable Future
Day 5 – Start Young for a Sustainable Future
Day 6 – Smarter Supply Chains for a Sustainable Future
Day 7 – Finance and Sustainability
Day 8 – Smarter Analytics for a Sustainable Future
Day 9 – Smarter Business for a Sustainable Future

I am sure some of you are skeptical of Prince Charles role here, or IBM’s for that matter- but both HRH and IBM have a long history of championing Sustainability. I am pretty excited about the event. Greenmonk will be covering some sessions and we will of course be twittering incessantly. We’re helping with social media strategy too. With that in mind- if you’d like to be on the inside of the Business tracks, or working the crowds in the garden, please let me know. We may be able to bring you into the fold. I am not sure I can bring the web to Start, but I can perhaps bring you in!

Gone Fishin

Well not really. I leave fights with pelagics to my younger, smarter business partner Stephen. But I am taking some time off, which is why I have been quiet on this blog, but also on twitter. Expect normal service to be resumed some time week after next. Most of the monks are out of pocket this month- anyone would think we were a continental European firm… If its urgent please contact our ops manager Marcia Chappell marcia at redmonk.com

Ciao!

IBM zEnterprise and The Reintegration of Everything.

IBM’s just launched its new zEnterprise server at a very interesting time for the market. So interesting in fact that’s its very hard indeed to sum up all the swirls and currents currently roiling enterprise IT. Cloud (public and private), consumerisation of IT, Big Data, devops, NoSQL and did I remember to say… cloud?

  • IBM Software Group has just “acquired” IBM Systems and Technology Group. That is – the managers that have aggressively built SWG into a software portfolio sales machine are now being given the hardware reins. Or should that be reigns?
  • Oracle is in the process of swallowing Sun, becoming a hardware vendor in the process. Don’t imagine that IBM’s reintegration strategy is a reaction to Oracle though- remember IBM has always been a systems company… its Oracle parking its tanks on IBM’s lawn, not the other way around. IBM is just moving forward with a grand reintegration which been going on since Lou Gerstner was in charge.
  • Big Blue just had a surprisingly decent quarter in x86/x64 sales. z and POWER were soft, but mainframe revenues are always lumpy as customers wait for a major upgrade to arrive. I have been following mainframes since 1995 and twas ever thus…
  • IBM is seemingly attempting something of a reverse Intel (making a transition from chip seller to memory supplier, following the money as the pendulum swings back) as it builds on Intel Nehalem foundation.
    • IBM’s new eX5 range of Intel-based servers takes a “network attached memory” approach, decoupling memory from Intel’s motherboards using a memory bus called X5. Nehalem servers are already memory beasts, but Big Data means Big Memory.

So what about the zEnterprise?

Its a hugely powerful mainframe – 96 cores running at a eye water evaporating 5.2GHz.  You will be able plug X Series and POWER blades into plex using -the IBM zEnterprise BladeCenter Extension, a logical extension to the central mainframe across other servers with management software designed to manage workloads across these systems.

5.2 GHz – damn- that’s the fastest chip ever. I can’t help thinking IBM really needs to start scaling out otherwise its a Hitachi Data Systems Skyline scenario all over again – but this time at IBM’s expense. Itanium has hardly been a huge success for HP.

You can’t argue with the performance though. 50 Billion Instructions Per Second (BIPS) – which translates into some faster workloads.

What is more I asked IBM Tom Rosamilia General Manager, Power and z Systems, IBM Systems and Technology Group, about heat generated and he told me the chips only run as “hot as an industrial toaster”. 96 industrial toasters in a small box? No wonder IBM is offering water-cooling. The energy characteristics actually look reasonable, but the toaster comment has been haunting me.

Seems to me the server losing its raison d’etre here is IBM’s System P line. Unix just becomes a personality, managed by the mainframe in the zEnterprise system of systems. Engineering will happen at the Rack and blade or zEnterprise level. That is not to say AIX won’t continue to make a decent app server plug in, but the new scale out workloads are going to Linux, the OS of the web.

Talking of Linux- IBM claims zEnterprise can now run 10k Linux images. Blimey.

In conclusion zEnterprise is a consolidation engine for IBM as much as its customers. It will bring a lot of things together, dealing with the industry trends I outlined in the intro. The system of systems story is certainly not new. IBM has pitched and repitched the mainframe as a security hub, a systems management hub, a data management hub etc.

What is different this time? The industry is waking up to mainframe advantages again. As EMC marketing CTO Chuck Hollis recently posted on his StorageZilla blog (utterly essential reading):

Indeed, EMC’s mainframe DNA impacts how we interpret terms like “non-disruptive” and “mission critical” and “high availability” and a lot else as well.  I think that one of the reasons so many shops depend on EMC for their most important apps is that we understand serious IT — regardless of whether it’s z/OS, UNIX or an uber-large VMware farm on the floor.

There’s another important message here as well: the cool things we continue to do for x86/hypervisor stacks, we also intend to do in the z/OS world.

Because mainframes aren’t going away any time soon …

Couldn’t have said it better myself.

In case you’re wondering what the illustration is- answers on a postcard please. IBM is a RedMonk client.

Interview with Symantec’s Jose Iglesias on Green IT

I got the chance to meet with Symantec’s Jose Iglesias yesterday. We had a good chat about his company and its green credentials and strategies. Iglesias is a wonderful advocate for sustainability but Symantec a firm has some way to go in that regard. He therefore sees himself as an internal, as much as an external, evangelist at this point.

Before I proceed its probably a good idea to point out that Symantec is about far more than antivirus. The firm acquired Veritas back in 2004, which brought it a bunch of enterprise file and storage management capabilities. Subsequent enterprise acquisitions filled out the portfolio. Symantec’s Green IT story is very much an enterprise play and arguably a solid sustainability product strategy could help to increase visibility for some of Symantec’s enterprise tools.

Thus for example – Symantec NetBackup PureDisk for storage deduplication could be used to cut the amount of storage and power.

One challenge for Symantec is identifying and serving the new buyers in energy reduction. Most of the firm’s traditional practitioner purchasers are not tasked with reducing the energy footprint of the products they manage….

“We sell to admins, but few get compensated on energy savings”

To which I would say… not yet.

Smart Grid as Game Changer

One major opportunity for Symantec to change the account management game there is to parlay its IT experience directly into related spaces such as Smart Grid security and asset management. I knew before the briefing that Symantec is having some early success in the Smart Grid market selling, for example, cryptography. Security is a major issue overhanging smart grid and remains a key selling point. Iglesias and I discussed Smart Grid Standards in depth – I will write that up in the near future.

I am not a fan of FUD though it certainly works. But let’s get real. In Europe for example we’re getting all excited about the need for smart grid standards to prevent tampering with our energy supply. Yet Russia could turn off a gas tap and we’d be screwed within weeks, no smart grid required.

Whichever way you look at it – energy reduction is going to be very big business indeed. The tail is starting to wag the dog.

Sustainability Reporting

GreenMonk has been tracking tech company CSR reporting efforts. Indeed- I am chair of SAP’s external stakeholder panel for its 2009 Sustainability Report. My colleague Tom Raftery recently noted an interesting split between the efforts of hardware and software firms when it comes to sustainability reporting –hardware companies good, software companies bad.

Sadly Symantec isn’t the exception that proves the rule (we leave that accolade to SAP). For one thing it only reports on Sustainability once every two years – pretty much an instant fail according to my Reporting taxonomy – Six Ways to Make CSR Reporting and Strategy not Suck.

Why should IT suppliers improve their efforts in CSR? The most obvious business is Requests For Proposals. Many massive tech purchasers, such as BT, won’t purchase goods or services from firms that don’t have a strong plan to reduce emissions. Then there are reputational issues. The best graduates aren’t falling over themselves to work for BP. When it comes to staff retention the latest research from Center for Creative Leadership indicates that “the more committed a company is to its corporate social responsibility initiatives, the more engaged and committed their employees are likely to be.”

We’d certainly like to see some leadership from Symantec on Sustainability Reporting.

It’s the Storage, Stupid

Iglesias showed what a propellerhead he is when he launched into the green opportunities around enterprise storage.

“I started my career as a mainframe programmer. Resources were very constrained.  IT is relearning many of its roots, and we need to learn from past mistakes- that’s where the Symantec Green IT program came from.”

Let’s take RAID for example, the data protection mechanism.

“Minimise the hardware you need. With dynamic storage you don’t need RAID 5. Analyse your workloads. Humans are awful at managing data placement in storage. Software is much better adapted to that. Our products- namely Storage Foundations will identify all files- jpegs say, and drop it down to tier 3.”

Another quick storage management win is policies based on age – if you haven’t touched it in six months you probably don’t need it nearline. Iglesias said companies should use use less expensive storage, in order to attain big savings in cost and energy.

According to Iglesias The same capacity in storage takes 8 times as much energy for tier one as tier two.  The delta between tier one and tier three is 1/64.

Final Thoughts

Symantec has a new CEO, Enrique T. Salem – and it will be interesting to see if he shows more or less of a commitment to sustainability than his predecessor- John W Thompson. My bet is on the latter former. The economic opportunity for sustainability leaders is very real indeed. Smart Grid is going to be perhaps the biggest tech market ever- IBM and Cisco look like leaders, but who else is going to make the investments needed to compete with them?

disclosure: IBM and Cisco are clients

Six Ways To Make CSR Reporting and Strategy Not Suck

I wrote a post yesterday that was long enough some of you might not have gotten to the end of it. But my friend Mark Charmer from Akvo did read it, and called out the salient points. Call it link-baiting, but it strikes me I should take a leaf out of his book. So using the tried and tested x ways to format…

  1. Reporting needs to be an ongoing process and conversation, not a once a year event.
  2. Reporting needs to be more like an app and less like a document.
  3. Data needs to be freely accessible, rather than presented in static form such as in a PDF – organisations should offer sustainability reporting APIs.
  4. Social. Web technologies allow us to put the social into CSR by engaging with a broader range of stakeholders. Integrate with and use tools like Facebook and Twitter.
  5. Sustainability must be tied into general business reporting and strategy.
  6. Sustainability must be a strategic imperative, not a PR-led effort

Related works – SAP’s latest Sustainability Report is teh awesome! Sustainability and CSR Reporting: There’s An App For That. A Letter to SAP and the future and this excellent piece Sustainability reporting in tech companies – the hardware vs software divide.

Sustainability and CSR Reporting: There’s An App For That. A Letter to SAP and the future.

“The best way to predict the future is to invent it” – Alan Kay

Back in 2007 or so I had an epiphany about corporate social responsibility and sustainability. Until then I had been skeptical about CSR – which I felt was the proverbial lipstick on the pig. The guy that did most to persuade me of the value of CSR was SAP’s James Farrar. He introduced me to Transparency International, after which I argued:

Like many others I have tended to view corporate social responsibility (CSR) with a great deal of suspicion. Its just puff, PR and flummery. Corporates try and make us think they have responsibilities and interests beyond profits and share price. Greenwashing, and so on. But spending time with the likes of the BT CSR team, I am realising we have a real opportunity here. The web changes everything, and spiking energy prices and global warming mean that CSR is being reassessed. Talking about efficiency is no longer the game. Now the CFO expects the organisation to actually deliver it. Sustainability is not just a buzzword any more, which means CSR is not window dressing any more either.

CSR is becoming a window itself- an important gateway between the business and us: individuals, customers and stakeholders. CSR becomes another breach in the corporate social membrane. But as Hugh MacLeod says “Nothing pokes holes in a membrane better than a blog.” (for blog we could also read Twitter or Facebook).

IF CSR is already a window, or hole in the membrane, social software can accelerate the dialogue and flow of information.

The realisation that sustainability was beginning to really mean something helped to create a raison d’etre for Greenmonk: open data leads to better outcomes, which meant the redmonk model might make sense in some new contexts.

My vision for more effective CSR:

  • Reporting needs to be an ongoing process and conversation, not a once a year event.
  • Reporting needs to be more like an app and less like a document.
  • Data needs to be freely shared, rather than presented in static form such as in a PDF – organisations should offer sustainability reporting APIs.
  • Social. Web technologies allow us to put the social into CSR by engaging with a broader range of stakeholders.
  • Sustainability must be tied into general business reporting and strategy.
  • Sustainability must be a strategic imperative, not a PR-led effort.
  • CSR reporting must be more like an app, and less like a document.

I have to say SAP performed surprisingly well in terms of realising this vision in its last reporting round. Active data, Facebook and Twitter integration and so on. My colleague Tom Raftery was moved to write: SAP’s latest Sustainability Report is teh awesome! SAP customers would do well to view SAP’s work as a showcase for its new products in the space, and consider using the firm’s frameworks in delivering their own 21st century Sustainability Reporting, Engagement and Strategy.

Things had moved into high gear in terms of delivering on that kind of vision when SAP invited me to be Chairman of the outside Stakeholder Advisory Panel last year, having helped with strategy the year before. The process was extremely interesting, and I will be writing it up in the next month or so. Anyway, here is the letter we wrote on SAP’s Sustainability Report for 2009, which I take the liberty of including in full. My advice to you- go check out the report, then see the letter.

Challenging SAP on form and substance

The Stakeholder Panel was invited to bring external perspectives to SAP’s executive management, to inform both the company’s Sustainability Report and its sustainability strategy. We see these roles as highly complementary: reporting is a means to the end of defining and executing a business strategy that is articulated around clear sustainability goals.  We have approached our review with the objective of 1) to enrich SAP’s sustainability strategy through a greater understanding of stakeholder expectations [SAP’s Materiality Matrix] inviting readers to vote and comment on sustainability priorities], and 2) to increase and improve SAP’s transparency, as a means towards greater accountability.  We are therefore pleased that the company has welcomed our input on both the form of its reporting and the substance of its actions.

Overall, the Panel is impressed with the scale and scope of SAP’s ambition for its sustainability reporting. One of the most compelling aspects of SAP’s sustainability strategy is its commitment to merge its values, which reflect a clear ambition to be a sustainability leader, with its corporate goals and core business strategy.  The Sustainability Report therefore serves the role of mission statement, stakeholder engagement tool and roadmap for what SAP has achieved to date and seeks to achieve in future”.

The Panel greatly appreciates SAP’s effort to make the Report more interactive, by opening up new engagement and feedback channels using social Web technologies, such as Twitter and Facebook. This strengthens the connection with stakeholders and opens the way for them to influence the company’s behavior.  This is an aspect of the report which will not only benefit readers, but also promote wider acceptance of this model by other companies considering similar steps.

Promoting Software for Corporate Sustainability

Of particular note is the fact that SAP has now unambiguously embraced the role of enabler. As a software company, SAP has a relatively modest direct environmental and social footprint, although we note the rising energy demands associated with the rise of cloud computing on which SAP will increasingly rely. We welcome SAP’s commitment to developing business solutions that can enable significant improvements in its customers’ sustainability performance, which it is pursuing through its enabler strategy [SAP’s Solution Map] outlining the company’s vision for software technology to enable a more sustainable enterprise]. SAP’s co-CEOs, Bill McDermott and Jim Hagemann Snabe, have emphasised the enabler strategy to key customer audiences, to reinforce the importance the company places on this aspect of its business.

Yet while this focus on the enabler strategy is welcome, SAP can further strengthen how it reports on it. The 2009 Report is thorough and transparent about SAP’s own direct environmental footprint – notably in travel and transport. But we believe that the next frontier is for SAP to measure and report on how it has enabled its customers first to reduce their negative impacts, and ultimately to increase their positive impacts, on society and the environment.  This will present a much more meaningful and complete picture of what SAP’s broader impacts are, and will also demonstrate the value that it adds to its clients, thereby strengthening the case for building its business around delivering sustainability solutions.  The 2009 Report is a good start: it includes links to case studies of SAP customers who have improved their sustainability profile.  But SAP should leverage its interactive data-driven approach to measure, report and indeed take credit for, the sustainability impacts of its customer base.

Language matters in innovation, providing a framework for thinking about how to solve problems. While the report often speaks in terms of optimizing efficiencies, sustainability can, and should be, an aspiration towards a restorative economy that enables abundance.  SAP should turn its attention to enabling its customers – and readers of its report – to evolve from managing down their negative impacts, such as emissions, health & safety incidents or ethical breaches, towards making a net positive contribution to society and the environment.  At present, SAP is serving as an agent that enables clients to modify their existing business models through incremental steps. Ultimately, however, SAP can act as a catalyst for customers to transform themselves by re-inventing their business models around new opportunities to increase economic benefit within planetary boundaries.  Defining new metrics to capture these positive effects, rather than just measuring and managing social and environmental ills, is where the real challenge and opportunity lies for SAP and its customers.

Assessing a new kind of Report
This Panel’s activities have been structured to accommodate a traditional static report, even as SAP has sought to introduce a dynamic and interactive reporting model.  This is a very positive step forward for sustainability reporting, but it poses a challenge for the external review process, which cannot operate on a continuous basis in the way SAP intends for the report. The Panel does not have a monopoly on external comment on the report, as SAP has enabled readers’ comments on both its report and its strategy via the report site. We welcome SAP leadership here, as an exemplar for corporations seeking to more deeply engage with stakeholders on sustainability issues.

We also see areas where SAP can improve its reporting. While SAP has done excellent work in presenting data visually through charts and graphs, sometimes less is more. SAP should aim for accessibility and digestibility, rather than aiming to present all possible information.  In addition, much of the language in the Report reflects the technology culture of the company, or, alternatively, makes heavy use of the jargon of corporate sustainability practitioners.  This may make it meaningful to certain specialists, but much of the language is impenetrable to the ordinary reader, giving the impression of SAP talking to itself rather than engaging with outsiders.

Summing Up and Conclusions

Finally, while SAP has pushed the boundaries of inclusiveness through its use of new media, it should also take care to ensure that the report is fully accessible.  In many parts of the world where SAP and its clients do business, Web access is not generally available. Therefore the report may not be as available to those readers.

We applaud SAP for its innovation in reporting format, and for the clarity with which it has articulated its two-part sustainability strategy.  We look forward to continued innovation, and more detailed information in the future about how the strategy is being implemented, and how its enabler strategy is delivering not only business results, but also sustainability impact.

I have a lot more work to do in terms of documenting the process, and explaining how I see CSR evolving. But that’s the nature of the beast.

disclosure: SAP is a client though I was not directly paid for being on the Sustainability Panel.

UK Government Opens Data: A Cautionary Tale

Internal view of one of the clock faces

Some of Coté‘s link comments are better than my blog posts. Like the one I lift wholesale below, for your perusal and delectation.

Data.gov.uk troupe gets shirty about standards
A nice cautionary tale of governments opening up data. Part one: don’t over-rotate on the perfect format to have the data in, just put it up on the web and evolve it. Part two: make sure the government understands what “open” means, a hint is that it doesn’t mean using a third-party contractor to gate who gets access to the data. Another interesting note is that while we in the software world love the idea of “release early, release often” or “fail to success,” we have zero tolerance for that approach when it comes to the government. “Beta” and “government” don’t mix well.

There you have it – follow Coté.

EMC Big Data Play Continues: Greenplum Acquisition

I wrote recently about VMware’s emerging Data Management play after the announcement the firm was hiring Redis lead developer Salvatore Sanfillipo.

While [CEO Paul] Maritz may say VMware isn’t getting into the database business, he means not the relational database market. The fact is application development has been dominated by relational- Oracle on distributed, IBM on the mainframe – models. Cloud apps are changing that. As alternative data stores become natural targets for new application workloads VMware does indeed plan to become a database player, or NoSQL player, or data store, or whatever you want to call it.

We have been forcing round holes into square pegs with object/relational mapping for years, but the approach is breaking down. Tools and datastores are becoming heterodox. something RedMonk has heralded for years.

Now comes another interesting piece of the puzzle. EMC is acquiring Greenplum – and building a new division around the business, dubbed Data Computing Product Division. While Redis is a “NoSQL” data store, Greenplum represents a massively parallel processing architecture designed to take advantage of the new multicore architectures with pots of RAM: its designed to process data into chunks for parallel processing across these cores. While Greenplum has a somewhat traditional “datawarehouse” play – it also supports MapReduce processing. EMC will be competing with the firms like Hadoop packager Cloudera [client] and its partners such as IBM [client]. Greenplum customers include Linkedin, which uses the system to support its new “People You May Know” function.

There is a grand convergence beginning between NoSQL and distributed cache systems (see Mike Gualtieri’s Elastic Cache piece). It seems EMC plans to be a driver, not a fast follower. The Hadoop wave is just about ready to crash onto the enterprise, driven by the likes of EMC and IBM. Chuck Hollis, for example, points out Greenplum would make a great pre-packaged component VBlock for VMware/EMC/Cisco’s VCE alliance – aimed at customers building private clouds. Of course Cisco is likely to make its own Big Data play anytime soon… That’s the thing with emergent, convergent markets- they sure make partnering hard. But for the customer the cost of analysing some types of data is set to fall by an order of magnitude, while query performance improves by an order of magnitude. Things are getting very interesting indeed.

Hello World, It’s a Girl Thing

In case you’ve been wondering where I am, here is our new arrival. Naming is proving a bit tricky, but I figure any delays now will be worth it in the longer term. ;-)

On Makers and Prototyping

twttr sketch

My good friend Robert Brook just wrote a pithy post on “prototyping“. He raises some interesting questions that chime with my own thinking. Let’s face it- Twitter is really just a prototype that happens to have 100m+ users. Prototypes are often quick and dirty, but that’s a good thing. The value of an app is a function of its immediate and future utility, not of an ROI projection.

Effective prototyping is essential for corporate pace layering of IT assets and governance. But if someone is telling you the prototype they want to build can’t actually be put into production well, that’s bait and switch isn’t it? Beware consultants bearing prototypes. If you have a good in-house development team on the other hand they will actually learn from building the prototype. And with any luck they’ll be able to put it into production. IT prototypes should not be like Concept Cars – but more like  a sketch that can be filled in, added to, and made into “the finished article”. A prototype should be more like a scaffold and less like a facade.

What I really like about the post however is that its about RedMonk’s base- the makers and doers. Robert says:

I’m more interested in tactics than strategy. Other people can do strategy – they certainly want to and they’re better at it than I am. My tactical interest in in tools, services and methods that support delivery. Actual things. Stuff.

RedMonk likes stuff too- and prototypes should be stuff, not nonsense.