Skip to main content

We’ve got a lot to talk about …

As we get deeper into the last month of the quarter, which for some may also be the last month of their financial year, it is inevitable that we look back at what happened in 2022. It’s a time when measures are taken to finish the year on a high note even as there will be those reviewing their product mix against changing market conditions. There is never a good time to change course and yet, staying the distance can be every bit as detrimental. But perhaps as we look back at the year, there will be conversations started that will need to be revisited as scattered among the many stories we hear are surprisingly numerous gems to be uncovered.

For Margo and me these last couple of months means we will be toiling for long hours at the tasks at hand. Not so much on keyboards as on steering wheels. With the return to in-person events we have a desire to attend as many as we can even if we do succumb to the long-haul flight every now and then. But as story tellers, there is a constant need for stimuli as it is an almost impossible task to dream up meaningful story lines when restricted to the four walls of your office.

For those who have dropped by our offices in Windsor Colorado – a small township adjacent to Ft Collins and just one highway exit before you come across the HPE campus on E. Harmony Rd. – there would be no mistaking the portion of our bar as depicted above. But the symbolism never escapes me as it’s not just the derogatory remarks about the contribution a salad has made to a great story but rather, the image of time within a plane and the reminder that yes, time flies!

There will be some within the NonStop community who may recall that this month represents the passing of an even greater milestone for Pyalla Technologies, LLC. This month ends fifteen years of posting to this NonStop community blog! Come October and Margo and I begin our sixteenth year of commentaries, opinions and yes, storytelling. To think, all those years ago, I was still gainfully employed at GoldenGate Software where my colleagues, amused as they were as I began to post, considered it a temporary pursuit at best. There were even those who thought I was a little crazy to commit to a blog featuring little else apart from NonStop.

However, clearly with what we have come through in the past couple of years we have a lot to talk about. For those who recall the lyrics of one of Jimmy Buffett’s songs, particularly those penned back in the days of the Global Financial Crises, then these lines should make you smile:

Well the family devalues
And little children plan their net worth
And the truth wherever it's hiding,
Can be found on Google Earth.

I can't take another doomsday minute
We got a lot to drink, a lot to think,
A lot to drink about.

Yes, we have a lot to talk about too, but in the coming months as we all head back to in-person events, dare I add that as Jimmy notes only too well, we got a lot to drink about. But which way do we go? Where do we steer pertinent conversations?

Fortunately, those responsible for organizing the upcoming in-person events are taking to heart one of the signature components that have contributed to the success of Tandem Computers that being, the regular celebratory beer busts. While the keynote and vendor sessions provide value over the course of the event, the real heavy lifting that occurs between NonStop community members more often than not takes place while standing up with an adult beverage in hand.

From the many conversations I have had this past year, three items jump right off the page – the price book, virtualization and yes, GreenLake. From the early days of Tandem Computers, the presence of an energized independent vendor community proved to be key to the success of NonStop. Looking not so far back, NonStop systems were tangible boxes that reinforced the notion that investments had been made in state of the art computers. But now, NonStop is software and with virtualization, can be deployed almost anywhere the Intel x86 architecture has a presence (along with fabrics that NonStop supports) and then everything as a service with GreenLake looming large for all NonStop users.

So, the price book: The project going by the name of Showcase. How did that all happen and what are the implications for the NonStop community? Despite the early attempts to provide a win-win for all involved, there are numerous unintended consequences we can sit down and discuss. From the outset, there were thoughts given to duplicating what existed in from Tandem days with the alliance program – a catalogue of every product offering supporting Tandem.

However to revisit the alliance program and to take it many steps further by including every product and service on the NonStop price book was unrealistic as it was unfair. Unrealistic when it came to expecting the limited resources that exist today across NonStop product management to then evaluate every product to ensure that all these products did what they were supposed to do and that the vendors were viable over the long term was not possible. Unfair when it came to discounting all the efforts put into lobbying and nurturing relationships, by numerous vendors, with the NonStop team spanning decades.

This will likely be a topic to be discussed over more than one adult beverage and I encourage the community to become involved. As for unintended consequences, as much as I am a proponent of unity and of presenting a unified face to the world at large, Showcase has the potential to be divisive in ways not fully anticipated. Given how today the NonStop sales team is being remunerated only for products and services sold from the NonStop price book, don’t expect any enthusiasm on the part of HPE NonStop Sales when it comes to presenting non price book solutions. Yes, much ground to cover on this topic.

However, when it comes to topics up for discussion we cannot ignore the giant steps that the NonStop team is taking with NonStop. Virtualization took many of us by surprise when it was first announced that NonStop as software was becoming a reality and furthermore, the umbilical cord tying it to HPE hardware was being severed. Run on your favorite x86 with access to fabrics and there you have it, NonStop running seamlessly anywhere you care to locate it.  

What shouldn’t surprise anyone is that this move to NonStop as software is nowhere near complete. Being able to run NonStop in your on-prem private cloud is now the realm of possibility. And why consider doing that? Perhaps giving NonStop SQL/MX the opportunity to enjoy its own cloud experience is one possibility, but so too is giving developers their own NonStop environment. And the data never leaves the premises. So, what’s to discuss? Inevitably such conversations turn to public clouds and while there is nothing appearing on the whiteboard or on bar coasters as yet, this is definitely worth a discussion and it’s one I would like to be a part of come NonStop TBC 22. Bottom line? The support by NonStop of virtualization is goodness for the community.  

Finally, GreenLake! Like many of you I am hoping to hear a lot more about the realities of GreenLake when it comes to NonStop. The GreenLake Server, Console and API are all significant areas where NonStop is likely looking to support as indeed early steps have been taken. But the bigger question is twofold. Has the NonStop vendor community stepped up to support; are they embracing the GreenLake API for instance. In addition, are NonStop customers looking to GreenLake and the cloud experience when it comes to running mission critical applications 24 x 7; are there real benefits to be gained?

Again, just one more discussion I am sure will take place as we return to in-person events. There is much that is positive happening with NonStop and for that I for one am extremely thankful. And I don’t see any value in bringing negativity to such discussions, apart from the occasional “if only” or “I wish for this” as that’s all goodness. A healthy NonStop community prepared to discuss the finer points of the technology, the products and yes the business is a positive outcome for all involved with NonStop. The mere fact that HPE through Connect are giving us such an opportunity has to be recognized for what it is – trust. That is, trust that the NonStop community still views a future for NonStop that continues to meet the unique business requirements of those enterprises needing true fault tolerant operations around the clock.

To finish up I will leave it to the lyrics of yet one more Jimmy Buffet’s song. Not to be taken too seriously, naturally, but something we can all respond to even when we think we know the path we need to tread in the coming year:

Now I'm having a big problem
With my present day career
My ship she has a rudder
But I don't know where to steer

Life is complicated with its
Ifs and ands and buts
It's alright to be crazy,
Just don't let it drive you nuts


 

Comments

bhonaker said…
As for the last song lyrics, my only comment is... "That's not a drive, it's a short putt!"

Great article, Richard
Richard Buckle said…
Cute ... but oh so true for us in hindsight!

Popular posts from this blog

If it’s June then it’s time for HPE Discover 2021.

  For the NonStop community there has always been an annual event that proved hard to resist; with changing times these events are virtual – but can we anticipate change down the road? Just recently Margo and I chose to return home via US Highway 129. It may not ring any bells, but for those who prefer to call it the Tail of the Dragon – 318 curves in 11 miles – it represents the epitome of mountain excitement. For Margo and me, having now driven the tail in both directions, driving hard through all these turns never gets old. Business took us to Florida for an extended week of meetings that were mostly conversations. Not everything went to plan and we didn’t get to see some folks, but just to have an opportunity to hit the road and meet in person certainly made the 4,500 miles excursion worthwhile. The mere fact that we made touring in a roadster work for us and we were comfortable in doing so, well, that was a real trick with a car better suited to day trips. This is all just a p

Three more wishes coming soon – the path ahead for NonStop.

So, another three years have passed by and I find myself writing a preview of what I will likely focus on in eighteen months’ time – my next three wishes for NonStop! It wouldn’t be fair on my family if I said 2019 had been a routine year for Pyalla Technologies. It started with the return flight from Sydney, Australia, and continued with three separate trips to Europe plus a lengthy road trip to Las Vegas for HPE Discover 2019 combined with stops in southern California and participation in N2TUG back in Texas. The miles have added up but all the while even as the adventurous life continued to unfold, there was so much news coming out of HPE that scarcely a day passed without a discussion or two over what it all means. Margo and I have our roots firmly anchored in NonStop, dating back to Tandem Computers where Margo had risen through the development organization all the way to the COO role under the stewardship of Bill Heil when Bill headed the NonStop Software BU. As for me

ACI Strategy - it's all about choice!

I have just returned from spending a few days in Omaha attending the annual ACE Focus meeting. These two day meetings provide more in-depth technical coverage than is usually found at the regular ACI user events, and ACI customers have been coming for more than a decade to hear the messages directly from company executives. The picture I have included here is of the venue of the Wednesday night social event – a reception held at a local sports bar called the ICEHOUSE. And I found this extremely ironic as my own involvement with ACI came through my association with the ICE product. For most of the ‘90s, ACI had been the global distributor for ICE and then, as we began the new millennium, ACI purchased Insession, creating a separate business unit that it named Insession Technologies. For nearly six years, as part of ACI it enjoyed a successful partnership with the NonStop community and had provided a number of solutions in communications, web services, and security. But the decision in l