squiz cloud presentation march 2012
DESCRIPTION
TRANSCRIPT
> 1
Squiz Cloud – Agenda
This presentation will cover:
> The origins of the Squiz Cloud
> Squiz case studies
> The G Cloud & the new practice of buying IT
Squiz Hosting – An Introduction
> We have an international footprint
> 4
The Squiz Network
> No contractors - owned & operated by Squiz
> Provides redundancy - Squiz connects to 4 upstream providers
> Allows portability - Squiz owns its own (IPv4 & IPv6) address space on the internet
> We control and maintain our own redundant routers, firewalls and switching infrastructure.
Question> The first demonstration of how to build very large internet
sites using large clusters of computers was done by:
> Stanford> Berkeley> Yahoo!> Google> IBM
The Origins of Cloud
The Berkeley NOW Project “Networks of Workstations”
The Origins of Cloud
The Sun E-10000 “Supermini”> Up to 64 Processors> Up to 64 GB of RAM> Up to 20 TB of Disk> Used by eBay, among others
The Personal Computer > 200Mhz CPU> 32MB of RAM> 4GB Disk
The Origins of Cloud
What if I want to upgrade?
The Origins of Cloud
Access is the killer App!> Data & Services located in
Infrastructure the cloud> Search, email, personal
communications, productivity, etc> The idea of mobile access &
applications evolved. > This requires scalability
The Origins of Cloud
You don’t buy servers anymore!> You buy resources, only what you need
Welcome to utility (aka cloud) computing> Enables 1 user/developer to build online services and
scale infinitely as required.
The Origins of Cloud
The Squiz Cloud – How it came to be
We live in an age of “Ready, fire, aim”> Online solutions need to be agile, changing strategic
direction should not be difficult
Is your “aaS” covered?> If your organisation’s web presence isn’t provided “as a
Service” – you may be missing the boat. Squiz can help!
Predicted growth has exceeded 500%> Our cloud has gone through 5 significant expansion
phases in under 6 months.
The Squiz Cloud – How it came to be
How it came to be – the challenges
> Affordability (without sacrificing functionality)> Agility (enables rapid deployment)> Redundancy (ensures we meet uptime guarantees)> Scalability (allows customers to survive infrequent
peaks)> The Squiz Suite was born!
How it came to be – Our Options
> Rackspace or Amazon
How it came to be – Our Options
> Rackspace or Amazon Offshore hosting doesn’t sit well with our government
clients.
> White-label
How it came to be – Our Options
> Rackspace or Amazon Offshore hosting doesn’t sit well with our government
clients.
> White-label If Squiz don’t control the infrastructure, Squiz can’t control
the quality.
> Continue to only provide dedicated (dinosaur) hosting
How it came to be – Our Options
> Rackspace or Amazon Offshore hosting doesn’t sit well with our government
clients.
> White-label an Australian vendor If Squiz don’t control the infrastructure, Squiz can’t control
the quality.
> Continue to only provide dedicated (dinosaur) hosting That’s so last year.
How it came to be
Let’s build a cloud like Google!
Let’s build a cloud like Google!
> It should scale horizontally, without an expensive SAN (Enables affordability)
> We should be able to provision remotely (Enables agility)
Let’s build a cloud like Google!
> We should be able to resize your services (Enables scalability)
Let’s build a cloud like Google!
> The infrastructure needs to automatically heal (Enables redundancy)
Let’s build a cloud like Google!
The Squiz Cloud
> It’s not VMWare!> Did you know VMWare relies on a single point of failure?
WARNING!
The Squiz Cloud – It’s Applogic
> Combines traditional “grid” computing with new virtualisation technologies
> Does not require shared storage devices, all physical nodes combine to form extremely large resource pools
> It is based on open-source virtualisation technologies
Cloud Computing & A Small Wedding
> A classic example of the value of Cloud Computing
> Westminster Abbey receives approx 200,000 unique visitors a month
> Then there was a small wedding….
But many organisations aren’t
> Traditional procurement lacks agility> A time consuming and costly exercise> So it’s not done very often…> Focuses on selecting one or a small
number of vendors> Creates a ‘locked in’ environment that is
hard to change
The G Cloud – Procurement for the SaaS
> Pre selects a large number of vendors
> Short contract length
> Focuses on choice and flexibility
The G Cloud Process
> Vendor must sign up to a common set of T&C’s
> Data must be portable> Software must be interoperable> SaaS delivered through Cloud
infrastructure> Buy through the Cloudstore
Questions?
> Stephen Morgan - Director, Squiz Europe
> @Stephen_Morgan
> http://uk.linkedin.com/in/stephenmorgan