HP Buys Cloud Provider, Gets Marten Mickos To Head Its Cloud Division 35
jfruh writes: In 2010, HP tried to buy its way into the analytics game by shelling out billions for Autonomy, a deal that was a famous disaster. But that isn't stopping the company from making big buys: it will be buying Eucalyptus, a cloud provider headed by ex-MySQL AB CEO Marten Mickos, and bringing Mickos in to head the new HP Cloud division.
LOL ... (Score:5, Funny)
Maybe he can show HP how to do URLs instead of the gibberish ones they've been using for years.
Because I get the distinct impression that the URLs like "http://h20565.www2.hp.com/portal/site/hpsc/template.PAGE/public/psi/swdHome?sp4ts.oid=3988164&ac.admitted=1410546638124.876444892.492883150" are caused by HP not really knowing how to do it.
Seriously, what the heck is h20565.www2????
Either this is a technology failure, or HP has been trying very hard to ensure that nobody could possibly find their documentation.
Re:LOL ... (Score:4, Insightful)
If I had to guess, it's a sign of outdated software, and a bureaucratically enforced software standardization.
h20565 being a server host's identity, www2 being a subnet for their "second generation" website makeover done sometime in the 90s or early 2000s, and the stuff at the end being some sort of session tracking based navigational nightmare.
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Either this is a technology failure, or HP has been trying very hard to ensure that nobody could possibly find their documentation.
Well, HP is a Fortune 500 company, so it's probably both.
Why fail merely through incompetence or ineptness when you can do both? You can legitimately classify every minor bug as WONTFIX - As Designed, and every major bug can be fixed as a design error in the next version of your hardware that costs 10% more. Obsolescence through incompetence is the major business model of the modern world.
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Fuck the cloud. Fuck the cloud. Fuck the cloud.
Just like forced insurance, dog licenses, or Monsanto and their biotech crap, I'll fight the cloud with everything I got, if I get to live.
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To be devil's advocate, are URLs "intended" to be human readable? I think there are arguments on both sides.
Doesn't it seem kind of silly, even though I admit they are more memorable, that every new movie that comes out has a new 'memorable' web site URL that's only relevant for a few months at most, rather than something like http://moviestudio.com/MOVIETI... [moviestudio.com]
Re:LOL ... (Score:5, Funny)
Thanks for the suggestion. That’s funny! I will do my best on all fronts at HP.
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LOL, only only Slashdot.
If you can fix that one thing, you will have been a stunning success, for all else that it encompasses. ;-)
Cheers (and good luck!)
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I'll have you know the website implementation process was par excellence for corporate software*.
Based on agile principles, the project was overseen by the VP for production, with advice coming from no less than two management consultancies. Actual day-to-day management was of course delegated to a team of internal PM's, carefully interfacing with the external consultancy PM's.
Stakeholder needs were carefully documented by a team of externaly contracted business analysts prior to commencement. Based on the
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you sound like you work there - in which case, you should already know that the only thing more useless than the external website search on HP's site, is the internal version of the same search engine.
Good! (Score:3)
nice (Score:1)
Since HP is apparently paying every tech news site include Slashdot not to mention their recent court ruling, I'll just leave this here:
"Hewlett-Packard and three subsidiaries pleaded guilty Thursday to paying bribes to foreign officials in Russia, Mexico and Poland and agreed to pay $108 million in criminal and regulatory penalties. For over 10 years Hewlett-Packard kept 2 sets of books to track slush-funds they used to bribe government officials for favorable contracts."
http://www.usatoday.com/story/... [usatoday.com]
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Dude, what are you talking about?
It was on the frigging front page [slashdot.org] this morning, ZDNet [zdnet.com], and a bunch of other places have covered it.
If you're gonna claim some kind of conspiracy theory, at least go with one that's plausible.
What's the angle? (Score:2)
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Lots of companies and applications make use of the Amazon API. So that one I see in the wild a lot. OpenStack is implementing a compatibility layer for that reason. I'd assume the reason for an HP cloud is to allow IT department that have heavily outsourced to HP to pull Amazon based cloud applications back into the main administration. I.E. a war against rogue IT.
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Great question. We are seeing a lot of interest among enterprises to have AWS-like functionality in their own datacenters. And we also know that they are eager to use OpenStack. So at Eucalyptus we decided to do something about it. Here is my blog about the topic: https://www.eucalyptus.com/blog/2014/08/11/why-eucalyptus-keynoting-openstack-conference
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It makes sense because HP has been working on one product, an orchestrator utility that can take a catalog of VM architectures (Hyper-V, OpenStack, ESXi) for private clouds, as well as public clouds (AWS, Azure), and have their software abstract that to the user. Open a VM, and the software pretty much does the rest.
With the ability to move a VM across architectures similar to a "meta" vMotion, it makes life interesting, be it moving a dev machine from a cluster to another one for archiving (perhaps a VM c
Re: What's the angle? (Score:1)
I was once an hp employee. Their death came with that mba guy. It is just painfully slow, because they have so much money. No chance in hell to compete with google. Hp already hated real engineers in the late 90s.
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It's been a long time since I've heard someone other than Carly blamed for the demise of HP.
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We use f5 load balancers, auto-starting ESX clusters...if a VM goes down it just moves over to a backup VM and alerts us; most times our
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Google has an article, About 11,400,000 results (0.36 seconds), on "capitalism."
Obligatory Link (Score:1)
http://youtu.be/9ntPxdWAWq8 [youtu.be]
a blip on the way to slow death (Score:2)
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Don't let facts get in the way of giving HP a good kicking though. This is Slashdot, after all.