How Sun Plans to Sell Project Blackbox (
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News Analysis: Sun decides it can't wait any longer to introduce its latest storage/data center producteven though no customers have seen it and it won't be available for a year.MENLO PARK, Calif.Sun Microsystems is so eager to become a larger player in data storage and data centers that it threw away the book this week regarding the way it usually announces new products.
Normally, the Santa Clara, Calif.-based IT hardware/software giant waits until just before a product is ready to go to work in the marketplace, then introduces it in a splashy hoo-haw event. And it almost always makes available a few customer-clients that have usedor at least testedthe new product in some kind of production environment and can talk about how wonderful the thing is.
Well, the splashy event was staged, but this time the producta revolutionary new portable data centerwont be ready for prime time until mid-2007. And no Sun customers have used, or even seen, this new thing; its come straight out of R&D to the parking lot here in this Silicon Valley suburb.
On Oct. 17, Sun unveiled Project Blackbox, which combines storage, computing, and network infrastructure hardware and softwarealong with high-efficiency power and liquid coolinginto modular units based on standard 20-by-8-by-8-foot shipping containers.
Each Blackbox holds up to 250 Sun Fire blade servers (standard 19-inch-wide size) and provides up to 1.5 petabytes of disk storage, 2 petabytes of tape storage, and up to 7TB of random access memory.
Read more here about the unveiling of Project Blackbox.
A fully configured Blackbox weighs under 20,000 pounds, has front and rear doors, seven service access points inside, and cutting-edge cooling and power distribution equipment.
"We were coming along so well on this project, and getting so excited about it, that we didnt want to wait any longer on getting the news out," David Douglas, Suns so-called vice president of eco-responsibility and director of the Blackbox Project, told eWEEK.
Isnt a Blackbox, in effect, a kind of "new" mainframe? After all, everything a computing system needs is harbored in this one big containernot terribly unlike the big machines IBM used to make 40 and 50 years ago.
"This is no mainframe. This is the future of computing, and the future is not a mainframe," the no-nonsense Jonathan Schwartz, Suns CEO and president, told eWEEK.
Sun hopes to sell these to all kinds of vertical markets, including oil and gas exploration, manufacturing, financials, health care, military, governmentyou name the market.
The idea of a walk-through, 20-by-8-by-8 box that handles an entire business in one room is rather easy to grasp, even for the more technically challenged among us.
Sun showed some artist-conception drawings of how these portable data centers could be usedairlifted to oil rigs and to positions atop tall buildings, stacked in literal data warehouses for larger companies, or shipped to Third World countries to help in health care field work.
They can also be used for quick Web 2.0 company build-outs, advanced military applications, and in developing nations and areas that use alternative energy sources.
These things are likely to be pricey, but Sun isnt ready to talk about that yet.
"We havent even given that a thought at this point," Douglas said. "We just wanted to get it up and running and show everybody what it can do. These things are like portable super computersand the supercomputers we have now arent very portable."
The new portable data center was something that Schwartz, whos been in his new job all of 142 days, himself helped cook up.
"I work on special projects for Jonathan, and this was one we really wanted to see get done quickly," Douglas said.
"We had all the elements in-house for this; it was just a matter of coordination. Its been in the planning stages for two years, and Ive been on the project for only about six months."
Next Page: Outside the box.