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Friday, June 19th, 2015

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    12:00p
    What the Spinoff May Mean for Raritan’s DCIM Business

    In an unusual move for the data center infrastructure management space, which in recent years has seen steady consolidation, Raritan announced earlier this week a plan to spin off its DCIM business as an independent company. The rest of Raritan is being acquired by the French vendor Legrand for an undisclosed sum.

    It’s unclear why Sunbird Software, the newly formed DCIM vendor, was not part of the acquisition. A spokesperson said neither company was willing to comment because the deal was still in progress.

    While the bulk of Raritan’s revenue likely comes from sales of its intelligent data center PDUs, its DCIM business has been relatively successful, according to market analysts who cover the vendor. Raritan is a private company, so information about its finances is not available.

    Raritan formed three decades ago as a keyboard, video, and mouse (KVM) supplier. Between then and now it added things like data center PDUs and racks to its product lineup. It’s had a DCIM solution since 2008, which according to Gartner has become one of its three main business units.

    Whether Sunbird will succeed in maintaining the momentum it has enjoyed as part of Raritan remains to be seen. We don’t know whether it will change strategy or stay the course.

    Legrand said it plans to let Raritan operate as an independent subsidiary. While Sunbird will be a standalone business, the plan seems to be to maintain strong ties to Raritan. Sunbird will act as a Raritan partner, and Raritan founder and CEO Ching-I Hsu will chair the DCIM company’s board of directors.

    What May Change

    There may be some changes in Sunbird’s go-to-market strategy. Raritan has relied primarily on channel sales, and we may see more focus on direct sales from Sunbird, Rhonda Ascierto, research director at 451 Research, said.

    Gartner analysts saw Raritan’s global sales-channel strategy as a strength for its DCIM business. It has “an IT-focused partner network and a direct presence in 13 countries,” according to the market-research firm’s 2014 Magic Quadrant for DCIM suppliers, where Raritan was positioned as a “challenger.”

    There may have been some perception in the market that Raritan’s DCIM solutions work best in concert with Raritan hardware. True or not, that perception should no longer be a problem for Sunbird, which will now be able to position itself as a software company that’s unencumbered by hardware sales considerations, Ascierto said.

    Gartner analysts saw integration of Raritan’s DCIM tools with its other data center products as a strong point. Whether Sunbird will continue investing as much in integration with Raritan hardware specifically is unknown.

    Speaking IT is Good for a DCIM Business

    Unlike many of its competitors, Raritan comes from the server side of the house more than the facilities side, Jennifer Koppy, research director at IDC, said. Because, despite early expectations, DCIM has become a product used primarily by IT staff, that legacy has perhaps helped its DCIM business succeed more than the market average.

    “Raritan is one of the few that’s actually made a little more money in that respect,” Koppy said.

    The company has two DCIM products: dcTrack, an asset-tracking tool, and Power IQ, which has a range of energy-management functionality. According to the Sunbird website, the new company is keeping both dcTrack and Power IQ brands, at least for the time being.

    The Need for a Unified Solution

    What Koppy (and some of the end users she has spoken to) would like to see more of is investment in single-pane-of-glass management capabilities for all the DCIM functionality Sunbird has. “Instead of having two modules a lot of [users] would like to have one,” she said.

    There’s a market for both approaches. While more advanced users may prefer a comprehensive solution, not everyone is ready to pay for a full DCIM suite deployment. This is the reason many vendors, including giants like Emerson Network Power and Schneider Electric, sell individual modules, each with its own set of capabilities.

    DCIM as Part of ITSM

    Robert Neave, CTO and co-founder of Nlyte Software, one of the leading a pure-play DCIM vendors, said Sunbird’s future success or failure will hinge on its ability to make it easier for customers to use its software together with other data center management systems, namely IT service management software, or ITSM.

    Raritan took a big step in that direction in May, announcing a DCIM connector for ServiceNow, one of the most popular ITSM solutions.

    DCIM overall is evolving to become part of ITSM, Neave said. Raritan acknowledged this in its ServiceNow announcement. Customers that use DCIM in this context will prefer to be able to configure it to gel with their ITSM software by themselves, without spending time and money on specialist services, Neave said.

    No Formula for Winning as a DCIM Vendor

    In the end, Sunbird’s success will depend on that and all other things any DCIM vendor’s success will depend on. In her recently published DCIM forecast paper, Koppy recommended that suppliers focus on simplifying integration with other management systems, providing visibility over distributed data center resources, help companies with people and process elements of data center management, and help create companywide support for DCIM.

    The DCIM opportunity is continuing to grow. IDC forecasts a nearly 16-percent compound annual growth rate between 2014 and 2019. Koppy pegged total DCIM supplier revenue, including software and services, at about $475 million in 2014 and forecasted it would close in on $1 billion four years from now.

    Whether Sunbird will be a big part of that story is unclear, but it’s clearly not in a losing position. After all, it is not going to be a small startup fighting for recognition from scratch, and maintaining close ties to Raritan should help it retain the success it has already had in the market. DCIM is a story that’s still developing, and nobody has the perfect formula for success.

    3:00p
    Do Electric Car Batteries Dream of Data Centers?

    Batteries that power Chevrolet Volt electric cars are living a second life in Milford, Michigan. General Motors is powering an IT administration building with a renewable energy setup, backed by the former Volt batteries, post-vehicle.

    The data center building is located on the proving grounds where the company performs validations for the Volt. A 74kW ground-mount solar array is coupled with two, 2kW wind turbines, which generate enough power for the office building and lighting for the adjacent parking lot. The setup results in net-zero energy use on an annual basis, generating enough energy to power the equivalent of 12 average households (100MWh), according to the company.

    That renewable energy setup is backed by five of the Volt batteries lined up together and nestled right inside test racks. Those batteries can provide enough energy to keep things running for four hours in the event of a power outage.

    “We were looking for an application that would make sense in the real world, and it was a natural match,” said Pablo Valencia, a senior manager at GM. “We came up with the setup based on two years of work at [U.S. Department of Energy’s] Oak Ridge National Laboratory.”

    Researchers from ORNL, GM, and ABB conducted several studies. The batteries are made to last as long as the vehicle and longer, with up to 80 percent of energy storage capacity remaining after life in a car. “It’s all about smart energy thinking over the entire lifecycle,” said Valencia.

    One million lithium-ion batteries per year will become available from various automakers for the secondary market beginning in 2020, according to Imre Gyuk, manager of the Energy Storage Research Program at the DoE’s Office of Electricity Delivery and Energy Reliability.

    This is an early real-world application for the used batteries, which were repurposed from early development models of the Chevy Volt. It presents one potential second use for the batteries.

    The batteries last orders of magnitude longer than consumer cells, said Valencia. “Add a zero on for number of cycles,” he said. “Eventually they will get recycled for societal benefit. We look at the entire battery system from a repurposing and recycling standpoint.”

    The company’s Milford data center, whose construction started in 2013, has achieved LEED Gold certification thanks to this innovative setup, as well as other green design choices.

    The data center uses liquid-based in-row cooling, Valencia said. The data center also takes advantage of Michigan’s cool climate.

    3:30p
    Friday Funny: Pick the Best Caption for “Green Data Center”

    Let’s turn this into a green data center!

    Here’s how it works: Diane Alber, the Arizona artist who created Kip and Gary, creates a cartoon and we challenge our readers to submit a humorous and clever caption that fits the comedic situation. Then we ask our readers to vote for the best submission and the winner receives a signed print of the cartoon.

    Congratulations to Jim Leach, whose caption for the “Twitter” edition of Kip and Gary won the last contest with: “Twitter is growing so fast, their bluebirds need a bigger cage!”

    Several great submissions came in for last week’s cartoon: “Data Center Colors” – now all we need is a winner. Help us out by submitting your vote below!

    Take Our Poll

     

    For previous cartoons on DCK, see our Humor Channel. And for more of Diane’s work, visit Kip and Gary’s website!

    4:38p
    Markley Building Out 50MW Boston Metro Data Center

    Markley Group has acquired a 350,000-square-foot building in Lowell, Massachusetts, it plans to convert into a 50-megawatt data center. Phase one is expected to be available in October.

    The new data center is massive, albeit dwarfed by its counterpart a 30-minute drive away in Boston. Markley owns and operates a 920,000-square-foot Boston data center at One Summer Street and believes the new facility will complement that property. The company recently raised $240 million to help finance data center expansion, both in iconic One Summer and other properties.

    Markley operates more than 3 million square feet of data center space and also offers a multi-site cloud, launched in 2013. The company’s One Summer property is one of the leading Boston data center hubs and easily one of the largest data centers in New England, with rich carrier connectivity and 12 utility feeds from multiple substations.

    The new data center will appeal to Boston customers in need of a good disaster recovery location. Latency between the two sites is less than one millisecond, said the company, making it perfect for asynchronous replication.

    While the upcoming Boston metro data center is ideal for DR, it will very likely serve as a primary data center for some. Lowell is the fourth largest city in Massachusetts, and, like in other major markets, more businesses are becoming comfortable with outsourcing to the wider metro area.

    The three-story building has good bones. It has 18-foot ceilings and can handle 600 pounds of load per square foot. It sits on 14 acres of land and has access to a lot of power. Diverse dark fiber networks will connect Lowell to One Summer, giving customers access to 80 network providers located at Markley’s flagship facility.

    Markley is building out additional disaster recovery features, such as 1,000 “hot seats” of secure workspace with network access and backup systems ready to go in case of an emergency.

    Markley said it is currently working with various officials and university representatives in seeking local talent to work at the new Boston metro data center.

    “In keeping with our philosophy of best-in-class offerings, the Lowell facility will be a state-of-the-art world class facility,” said Jeffrey Markley, CEO of Markley Group, in a press release. “With One Summer Street being the center of the universe for network connectivity in the region, our diverse dark fiber pathways to Lowell will extend those advantages to clients of the facility.”

    5:00p
    Weekly DCIM News Roundup: June 19

    Upon being acquired by Legrand, Raritan spins off its DCIM product to form Sunbird Software; No Limits extends its RaMP DCIM solution to building management systems with the addition of Modbus functionality; CommScope partners with HP for its iTRACS DCIM platform, and CenturyLink’s use of DCIM in its data centers nets a Network World Asia award.

    1. Raritan spins off DCIM offering into Sunbird Software. Raritan agreed to be acquired by Legrand and decided to spin off its DCIM business unit with additional resources and focus. The new Sunbird Software company will maintain a strong relationship with Raritan, but be able to focus exclusively on the DCIM market.
    2. No Limits Software extends building management capabilities to the rack. No Limits Software announced it has added Modbus master functionality to its RaMP DCIM solution, with the goal of extending building management system (BMS) capabilities to the cabinet level. BMS systems can now use Modbus TCP to poll for cabinet level information such as total cabinet power, rack PDU power, and temperature and humidity readings.
    3. CommScope partners with HP. CommScope announced that it has partnered with HP to provide its iTRACS DCIM platform with HP’s Converged Management Consulting Services.
    4. CenturyLink wins DCIM award – NetworkWorld Asia. CenturyLink announced its has won the DCIM category of the 2015 Network World Asia Information Management Awards. The award recognizes the effort CenturyLink has made for DCIM implementation in its global data centers and its approach to efficient data center processes.
    7:16p
    Seven Worst Cloud Outages Of 2015 (So Far)

    As cloud services proliferate, they drive much of the growth in the data center industry. Unfortunately, from time to time, even some of the biggest service providers experience cloud outages. The bigger the provider, the more companies and people are affected by the outage.

    Cloud outages are unavoidable, and the best a provider can do when their service goes down is put all hands on deck to identify, isolate, and resolve the problem, while maintaining honest and timely communication with their customers.

    Our sister publication Talkin’ Cloud has compiled information on seven worst cloud outages that have taken place so far this year. Let us know if you remember a massive outage that’s not on this list but should be. The big ones this year so far were:

    • Level 3 Communications in June
    • AOL mail in February
    • Microsoft’s Outlook.com in April
    • Google Compute Engine in February
    • Apple iCloud in May
    • Apple’s App Store and iTunes in March
    • Verizon IaaS in January – a planned outage we covered in depth on Data Center Knowledge

    Get the details on these outages at Talkin’ Cloud

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