vExperts Weekly Digest – June 24th 2013

vexperts6-24-13Apologize for missing last week, but I was solidly booked through and did not get a chance to do my standard collection of links.  This week there is a good amount of content available. So please feel free to take a look. As usual questions, comments, snark are all welcome.

Posted in vExpert, vExpert-Weekly | Leave a comment

There will be travel

travelingman

This last week was a busy one for me, and I chronicle it simply to illustrate that for those of you looking to transition or  “join the dark side” that you enter into the journey with your eyes wide open with full awareness. I’m illustrating this not to complain or brag, but simply to assist me in chronicling my changing career and if it helps anyone else make their decision to pursue this line of work then to me that is an added benefit.

While not always typical of the type of work that Solutions Architects/Sales Engineers do, the travel & trade shows aspect of the job is something that one needs to embrace as a critical aspect of this career. In addition there are levels of flexibility, perseverance  and discipline that  you will not encounter during the typical cubicle world IT position. As for today a week can start with a standard customer/partner meeting that should have been a 60 minute presentation ballooning into a full blown 100 hour week.

Lets recap my last 5 days.

Monday started with a 6 AM flight to Phoenix for a customer meeting, training, and installation. Throw in 2 conference calls, and a faulty piece of equipment, 2 hours of “stump the chump” and a customer dinner and around 11 PM you get the chance to check into your hotel for this thing called sleep. Except you dont really get much of that. I find it difficult to fall into any form of restful sleep in most hotels unless I am absolutely exhausted. Monday was no exception.

Tuesday kicked off with an 8 AM flight to Las Vegas for a partner lunch and presentation. Key point here being that the outbound flight was delayed 45 minutes, giving us 15 minutes to get from the airport to the lunch location. Thankfully it was a 10 minute cab ride and we made it in time. 2 hours later we should have been packed up and ready to go back home, as we had an all day event the day following. But that faulty piece of equipment from Monday had to be replaced, so it was back to Phoenix for an hour of hands on, followed by the last flight back to Orange County. Roll into bed at home (always a plus) at 11:30 and call it a day.

Wednesday: It takes a good hour and twenty minutes to get to San Diego with standard 6 AM traffic, and I manged it in sixty. The California Technology Summit was a day long event where I was providing demonstrations, speaking with customers, and potential partners. One thing you won’t really know until you do it, is know how well your voice will hold up when you have to speak for 8-10 hours straight. I’ve learned that I’m good for about 20 hours of speaking in a 48 hour period before I have to give my voice a good rest. Another key component is hot water with honey and lemon, it really does help. Rushing out of San Diego back up to Orange County to hit a 6 PM flight to Salt Lake City, which of course requires a detour to Las Vegas for a layover. Luckily I was able to check into my hotel room at 11:20 for some of that sleep stuff I keep hearing about.

As a side note, this was the first CTS and it was a decent event that provided some good lead generation. I continue to get excited about the prospects of Hyper-Converged Infrastructure and how it can be utilized in organizations of all sizes. While as a concept its not necessarily ground breaking in its scope, it is a disruptive platform and as such it requires a lot more outbound education for customers and partners alike. Posts around my thoughts on this are upcoming.

Thursday: Salt Lake City VMUG was a well attended event with around 280 people showing up. The day end Key Note was provided by non other than Scott Lowe who gave his discussion on time management. I’ve seen this presentation twice before and I highly recommend giving it a listen. A lighter version was done for the vBrownbag a while back. Time management is a key aspect of my job, especially since I work from a home office. Having worked in a cubicle or office setting for the previous 15 years the transition to essentially working for yourself can be difficult when it comes to making that transition.

VMUG’s are great events and I’ve written about them in the past. I think VMUG’s and the associated trade show activities are some of the most enjoyable aspects of my job. I really enjoy speaking about the technology and its application for today’s data center environments. There is nothing better than showing someone a feature or aspect of a piece of technology and seeing that light bulb go off over their head as they A: get it, and B: start planning right there on the spot how they would implement it in their environment. I live for that moment. 

SLC VMUG also ended with a vBeers that I had organized. Beer in Salt Lake City you say? Well you don’t have to drink beer, they offer other beverages.  I was thankful of the VMUG leadership who allowed me to get up and invite all those in attendance at the end of show giveaway period. And while the attendance was lower than other events, Scott Lowe joined the small crowd and a very good discussion around Software Defined Networking was had by the group. To me that is the key value around a vBeer type event. People that have spent an entire day at VMUG are still passionate enough about what they do to stay even longer after and discuss and explore even further. You never know who will show up, and so far every one I’ve either hosted or attended has been worth my time, still I think that for next time it will be a vRootBeers for SLC.

Friday: The final day of the week found me up early for group calls. The one pitfall of working for an East Coast company is that for them a 9AM meeting is 6AM for me. Fridays are usually reserved for Sales Calls, Team Calls, and catching up on email, planning the next week, and administrative tasks. This Friday was no different except I did it from a hotel room instead of my home office. With 3 hours of calls down we met up with a potential partner to discuss our technology and how we believe that it would be a good fit for their line of business. 

Some of my best meetings are the ones where I don’t have to deal with the slide decks and I can simply get up in front of a white board and start at the high level and work my way down. I find that these are the most productive meetings since we get to dispense with the marketecture and deal just with the merits and functionality. Suffice to say, not 15 minutes after leaving the meeting, the new partner was reaching out to get the specifics on how they could work with us. It was a great end to the work week, and also another aspect of the job I truly love, closing.

As luck would have it, my last two flights of the day were 100% booked. One advantage of flying a lot is the perks of hitting the higher level award programs, and in my case with Southwest, that means early boarding and priority checkin. I used to be a big window seat guy, but I’ve now found the benefits of the isle. Quick egress has become essential, especially when you have transfer flights to hit. 

ridersclubBy the time I got home around 6PM Friday evening I was pretty beat. Having not seen my family for the better part of 5 days some time was allotted for the ritual Friday Burger at one of my favorite places in my home town, the Riders Club (highly recommended), and yes some much needed sleep (that thing I had been missing all week).

So while the above weeks level of activity is not necessarily typical of my job, any one of those days could take place in a given week, and in this case they all took place in the same week. Thus is the nature of this business and the workload for a startup company. I hope this level of detail provides some insight into the scope of activity that can and will be expected if you decide to make the transition.

Now time to start planning for next week.

 

.

 

Posted in Sales Engineering, vBeers, VMUG | 3 Comments

Google Reader – Oh How I will Miss Thee

I could have written this post.

T-Minus 14 days till the immanent demise of Google Reader, a product I’ve used for a number of years on a daily basis for simple consumption of media. Sad Fact: I have google reader open all day and will reference it dozens of times during the day. It is the first thing I open when I logon my computer, and is usually the last thing I scan before I go to bed. I rely on Google reader more than I do email at times.

I also use Social Media such as Twitter, G+, and Facebook, but I cannot use those for the kind of pure consumption that I have trained myself on.I’ve been looking for a replacment but so far the alternatives are not all that stellar. Lets compare:

Feedly is interesting, its the most like Google Reader, but it relies on Google Reader now in order to function. The upcoming release is promised to be a full fledged replacement, yet I don’t know how you do that with 14 days left to do so without a significant beta trial run.

Feedly

Not bad really, it has a tight layout that is changeable, it lacks the ability to separate out by color (this was accomplished on Greader for me with a greasemonkey script, which I’m sure I could write if I had the time). Still  it lacks certain functionality, I cant drag and drop new feeds between folders, adding feeds is a bit cumbersome. Its still at this time a clone of GReader.

Feedbin on the other hand is a full Google reader replacement which is run by as I understand it, one person. Still it lacks the polish of both Feedly/GReader and right now is limited to specific views, little customization, and you have to pay for it. Now I don’t mind paying for it. Hell I’d pay google a $100 a year for GReader access so $20 on this isn’t going to kill me. Still, its early for this product and I am pleased that Ben Ubois is so responsive to suggestions.

Feedbin

Of course, when you have used something for years and have it dialed in, its hard to change. I think this is part of the reason Windows 8 have met with such abject horror.

This is the screen that greets me each day. Its easy to separate out posts (I hate white space), I can change the layout, the font sizes, how I sort and order my feeds, etc.

GReader

Of course this level of use didn’t happen overnight, it took a while for me to get to this level of comfort and I’m willing to bet that I could achieve it with the other products out there today, but… I can’t do what I do now with those products, and I cant understand why the platform is being killed off.

What pisses me off most about the Google decision is that if one coder can replicate a good 50% of what Google was capable of doing, then really how much resources do they have to carve out to keep reader alive? This is a company that has billions of dollars sitting offshore, private jets for its leadership team, and has time to build self driving cars, yet they can’t dedicate two people to keeping reader alive? Perhaps I’m missing the bigger context of the business decision to terminate GReader, but honestly I simply cannot get how Orkut is still a functional platform, yet GReader needs to be terminated.

 

 

Posted in Facepalm, Social Media | Leave a comment

Beast Mode at the Seattle VMUG User Conference

seavmugFollowing the back to back VMUG’s in San Diego and Silicon Valley, I found myself a week later back in my home town of Seattle, WA.  This trip was especially fun because it was a mini-reunion for several members of Team #vDB. I met up with Jason Langer, Josh Atwell, and Peter Chang. Peter leads the Seattle VMUG group and Jason sits on the steering committee. Josh was flown out to give his talk about Ginger Power oh and I think Power CLI. David M Davis from Train Signal was also in town to give the keynote. I highly recommend his training sessions on the various VMware product lines.

I was also there on business with SimpliVity Corp doing booth duty as well as to give a breakout session around our Hyper-Converged Omni-Cube. Suffice to say with a large crowd of 420 (only in Seattle), and around 130 visitors to the booth it was a good day of virtualization technology discussion.

Given the football theme of our giveaway, I was reminded of one of the most amazing plays in football history, I’m speaking of Marshawn Lynch and Beast Mode. Sixty-seven yards, nine broken tackles, a crowd response big enough to register on the seismic charts, and a massive upset defeat over the reigning Super Bowl Champions. That’s Beast Mode.Rams_Seahawks_Football_0bfb8

As the modern datacenter starts to transition from the legacy architectures of the past and into either the hyper-converged or software defined datacenter of the future, Information Technology departments will come to rely upon solutions that can go into “Beast Mode” when needed.

Successful Information Technology departments need to be fast, flexible, and agile, much like a professional NFL running back. They need to be able to deploy workloads quickly; they need to be agile enough to re-deploy those workloads where needed, and they require significant flexibility for the movement of workloads between datacenters.

oc-ds-create

Let’s take for instance the deployment of a datastore within VMware ESXi. The ability to provide simple provisioning without the additional complexity, and management tasks seems like something that should be integrated into any virtualized solution. For instance with the OmniCube system storage is presented to the federation quickly through a few mouse clicks. Simply choose a data center, give it a name, apply a default backup policy, and provide the size of the datastore. Done. The requirement to create and manage storage zones, deploy a storage LUN, or re-scan HBA’s to see newly presented storage volumes can be abstracted from the end user, and in this case these tasks and processes are not even required. Virtual machine storage is presented and ready to use in seconds, versus hours or even days (depending on the organization).

Agility and Flexibility for virtual machine workloads are a requirement in the modern datacenter as well. Here we can see from the vCenter plugin interface the process of migrating one virtual machine between two datacenters, this functionality is built into the OmniCube platform. 

oc-vm-move

Simply choose a virtual machine from within the vCenter console, choose a destination, and move.

oc-vm-move2

 

 

Since all data in the OmniCube Federation is deduplicated and compressed there is a significant reduction in the data transfer requirements between geographical locations. Virtual machine workloads and their backups can be moved seamlessly between OmniCube based datacenters providing a level of flexibility and agility that is not natively available in your traditional datacenter infrastructure. To provide this level of functionality in a standard reference architecture stack requires additional expense, configuration, and sometimes 3rd party applications. These are just two examples of what may seem like simple tasks that should be easy to provide in a virtual environment that can become cumbersome and time consuming. Remember, Beast Mode: fast, agile, and flexible.

I’m continuing to discuss this technology with end users at the various VMUG events that I am attending. The feedback has been positive. The coming weeks you can find me at the Salt Lake City, Vancouver BC, and Phoenix VMUGs. Stop by and say hi, and I can give you a demo and show you more of the functionality of OmniCube.

Posted in Omnicube, SimpliVity, VMUG, VMWare | Tagged | Leave a comment

vExperts Weekly Digest – June 10th 2013

vexpert6-10-13It’s time yet again for another  episode of vExperts Weekly Digest. This week, finds us hot on the heels of the 2013 vExpert nominations where over 577 vExperts were awarded status. Make sure you check out Jeramiah Dooley’s breakdown of this years group.

Also this week finds the us with the continual update of the VMworld Catalog. It doesn’t look like all of the approved sessions have shown up yet, with roughly 88 sessions currently available (compared to 200+ last year) my guess is that many of the vendor sessions as well as those related to new releases have yet to hit the catalog.

Those of you attending HP Discover or IBM Pulse this week in Vegas, please update your blogs ASAP and I’ll be sure to included some props your way.

This will be my first VMworld attended as a “sponsor” only. So I’ll be having to drop a few pounds to fit into my booth bikini (ewww). Still there  are  going to be plenty of opportunities to learn, network, and make new friends.

v0dgeball announcements should be forthcoming as well. Team #vDB will be looking to dominate all comers especially the dreaded Cloud Bunnies, who will be skinned, braised, and eaten on the floor of the SOMA rec center. #BringIt cc/ @CommsNinja

Posted in vExpert, vExpert-Weekly, VMworld | Leave a comment

vExperts Weekly Digest – vExperts 2013 Special Edition

yodawg-vexpertSo unless you have been living under a rock, or were at Citrix Synergy (I kid) then you are probably aware that last Tuesday saw the announcement of the vExpert Awards for 2013. So with that comes a special edition of the vExperts Weekly Digest devoted entirely to the announcements of vExperts by vExperts. 

 

Posted in vExpert, vExpert-Weekly | Leave a comment

Back to Back VMUG’s

My new role is primarily customer facing and there is a significant focus on the VMware User Group (VMUG) Community.With the removal of the VMForum events in the US, the VMUG End User Conferences have pretty much taken over as the single day event for VMware and the companies who play in their ecosystem to get together and pitch their wares to the public. Think of it as ‘mini-VMworld’ without the parties till 3am.

Ending April and starting May with a bang, I got to do back to back VMUG EUC events in San Diego and Silicon Valley.

San Diego – April 30th 2013

IMG_2625

Brought me to the San Diego VMUG End User Conference in La Jolla, California, where over 400 attendees were treated to a day full of virtualization technology presentations and discussion around the current and upcoming virtualization challenges.

One of those challenges was discussed in the a break-out session I hosted titled Infrastructure Convergence: Transformation, or Hyped Repackaging. Following the session there was a lively Q&A with audience members who had several questions about the SimpliVity OmniCube and how the platform could be utilized within their environment. The common theme of many of the questions focused on the ability to move virtual machines and their data across multiple sites in the enterprise, and the pain points associated with remote site management. IMG_2635

Being that San Diego is pretty much my home turf in SoCal I had a good turnout for my session. It’s always nice to see one or two familiar faces in the crowd. Overall it was a good session with a lot of good questions. I l personally like to do a more in-depth Q&A after these discussion because it helps on a two fronts: did the audience pay attention during your session, and do they see the potential answers to the questions you are attempting to solve with your solution.

I’d gauge this session as a success we spent about 15 minutes answering many questions.

Silicon Valley – May 1st 2013

IMG_2656So break down the booth, high-tail it to the airport and rush up to San Jose for the following day. One of the things I like best about working on the vendor side of things is that I get to interface with a lot of friends across the industry. Sure many of them may work for competitive companies, but in the storage and virtualization arena there is kind of a group cohesion, or what I would call a respectful rivalry. It’s not uncommon to share a cab from the airport or a meal with the team members from competitive companies. This reminds me in a way of my time in the Military where there were inter-service and even inter-company rivalries that could get heated, but at the end of the day you could all go out and have a beer together.

San Jose had great turnout.With a keynote by Scott Lowe, they broke past the 500 user mark. Being so close to VMware and many other technology based companies gave me the opportunity to speak with a larger number of the programmers and engineers who develop the technology systems that OmniCube works with. I spoke with representatives from  Ebay, Cisco, Disney, VMware, Intel, and many other players in the Valley. I think with close to 150 visitors and roughly 40 demos done that day, my voice was pretty much shot. One thing about doing these back to back events is that you have no idea how much speaking you will do. Thankfully, tea with honey and lemon was provided and served as a soothing presence. In the course of your work day you may speak to 10 people for 30 minutes to an hour of sustained speaking. At events like this, its 10-12 hours of speaking straight. I’ll be investigating throat lozenges.

Post VMUG it was over to Bennigans for a vBeers that Kokopelli organized, which honestly was one of these rare events where some pretty big players in the industry just happened to be in the same room together. I totally bumped into Mark Twomey aka Storagezilla, who I’ve enjoyed reading and listening to for years, and who I missed at VMworld last year which for a storage geek like myself was a treat.

I just recently did Seattle too, so look for a report from that event as well. Big time fun there with David Davis, Josh Atwell, Jason Langer, Rick Vanover and many others.

Posted in SimpliVity, Virtualization, VMUG, VMWare | 2 Comments

Humbled I Am – vExpert 2013

humbleFirst I’d like to thank John Mark Troyer who continues to run one of the best technical community organizations in the world.

For the second year in a row, I have been selected as a VMware vExpert, one of 574 in the vExpert Class of 2013. The growth of this program and its outreach has been significant this year. From last year, the total number was 443, we see roughly 131 new vExperts added to the list. Without having gone through the entire list so far, I can’t tell what the repeat to new ratio will be. I’m sure that analysis will be done in the days to come. Still its awesome to see this group grow and mature from year to year. New blood brings new ideas and new perspective, which for us is always a good thing.

And now, to all of those who were selected this year congratulations, you are now part of a first class community of people who are just as passionate about virtualization as you are.

For the first timers a few tips:

In the coming days and weeks you will be treated to a peek behind the community curtain. There is a lot of information to digest, and a lot of emails to receive.  I suggest setting up some email filtering rules to help you cope with the onslaught that is coming your way. I think my total vExpert email count numbered into nearly 3000 this year. 

Fill out your vExpert Profile and if you are active in Social Media or have a blog, update the community lists that will be available. This is important to help get your own personal message out to the community.

Be patient. There are many benefits to being a vExpert but they can take time to come into being. Please don’t spam the forums 🙂 Also, please understand that this is a community that has an element of give and take, and if you can contribute please do.

Shameless Plug:

And if I can plug some of the things I’ve been doing for the community over the last year: sign up for the Google+ Community we created. Shoot me a message to get your blog added to the vExperts Weekly Digest

 Oh and for you new to the club, remember, wear sunscreen.

 

Posted in vExpert, VMWare | 4 Comments

vExperts Weekly Digest – May 27th 2013

vExpert-5-27-13And here we are yet again with another weeks collection of links from around the vExpert community.  Lots of good content from the past week:  VMTN Communities (now updated for mobile), a primer on learning NVP, vCenter 5.1 U1a release, and lots of storage related information. Click the link above and go check it all out. Tomorrow, we should be getting word about the vExpert 2013 awards. I’m sure the twitters will start burning up a storm once the announcement comes in.

Posted in vExpert, vExpert-Weekly, VMWare | Leave a comment

Ladies and Gentlemen of the vExpert Class of 2013

vmw_logo_vmware-expert_250x100_02

Wear Sunscreen.

 

I have no idea at this very moment if I have been chosen or not. Regardless, I still believe that this is one of the best community based groups within the technology spectrum. So Congrats to all of my vPeeps. Looking forward to a very prosperous and fun filled year spreading the virtualization word. Hope to see as many of you as I can in person at VMworld this year

Edited 6:30PM PST to add (after much speculation that the list would drop today, it appears delayed until Tuesday)

vexpert2.

Full list and post vExpert analysis to come at a later time, and probably from someone else. It’s been a crazy busy week, and a delicious adult beverage beckons me.

Posted in vExpert | 1 Comment