Author: Serkadis

  • The Robohand Project Gives Kids A New Grip On Life

    Screen Shot 2013-05-08 at 11.25.30 AM

    Makerbot has released an inspiring video about how a group of hackers built 3D-printed hands for children and adults who are missing fingers or entire hands. The project aims to take the cost and complexity associated with hand prosthesis out of the process. It is working.

    The blog post is here but, in short, the Robohand project is an effort to release the plans for a completely open-source, 3D-printable hand. The fingers close when the user bends his or her wrist and the parts can be printed on any 3D printer. It’s perfect for kids because, as they grow, caregivers can simply upgrade the hand with a few mouse clicks.

    “We scale it up and print him another one,” said Richard Van As, a carpenter who lost four fingers in an on-the-job accident. Van As, who lives in Johannesburg, learned of the Makerbot when he teamed up with prop designer Ivan Owen. Owen and Van As collaborated on the project over the past year and have helped folks with amputated or missing digits get the proper prostheses.

    You can donate to the project here or just enjoy the video. I would equate this project to the effort to give out glasses to children in the developing world. The fact that two Internet buddies solved the problem of hand prosthetics in their spare time, however, is amazing and inspiring.

  • Saul Bass: A Look At Some Of His Most Well-Known Corporate Logos

    Saul Bass is the subject of Google’s homepage doodle today. The graphic designer was known for designing a plethora of well-known film title sequences, movies posters and corporate logos.

    He has won awards for his work (including Academy Awards), and much of his work is simply iconic, and will be recognized for generations to come.

    Here, you can see Google’s animation, paying tribute to a number of his products. Here are some Star Wars posters aiming to emulate and pay tribute to his styles.

    Let’s take a look at some of his finest work:

    Saul Bass logo

    Saul Bass

    Saul Bass

    Saul Bass

    Saul Bass

    Saul Bass

  • EMC Launches Data Protection Suite, Software Enhancements

    Day two of the EMC World conference in Las Vegas began with a session from EMC Chairman and CEO Joe Tucci, and Pivotal CEO Paul Maritz. EMC announced a Data Protection Suite, made updates to its management software suites, and enhanced its Syncplicity file sync and sharing solution.

    Data Protection Suite

    EMC announced a flexible approach to EMC backup and archive solutions with the EMC Data Protection Suite. It has a flexible licensing model that allows customers to mix and match the usage of individual products to best fit their requirements. The EMC Protection Storage Architecture leverages consolidated protection storage as a repository for data, provides integration across the IT environment, and is tied together with consolidated data management as a way to deliver a catalog of data protection services.

    “As the world’s largest backup provider, we have to innovate to retain our clients’ patronage,” said Guy Churchward, President of the EMC Backup Recovery Systems Division. “This comes in the form of not just technology but also the consumption model. The EMC Data Protection Suite is an excellent way for customers to harness the benefits of our broad portfolio with a simple, flexible approach without compromise.”

    Enhanced Management software suites

    EMC announced enhanced management software suites designed to provide transparency into storage, network, and compute infrastructures, including new and tight integration with EMC ViPR. The new EMC Service Assurance Suite and updates to the EMC Storage Resource Management Suite share a common presentation layer with ViPR, which allows operations and storage teams to visualize, analyze, and optimize their infrastructure.

    “The enablement of IT optimization and analytics afforded by Service Assurance Suite and Storage Resource Management Suite are the result of unprecedented transparency — transparency that only comes with powerful software and a simplified management layer,” said Bob Laliberte, Senior Analyst at ESG.

    The new Service Assurance Suite features reports on availability, performance and configuration management, and cross-domain management analysis. It has been updated with new Dashboard and Explore Views for VNX environments to enhance file reporting and end-to-end relationship and topology visualization.

    EMC Syncplicity enhanced

    EMC announced increased storage flexibility and control for EMC Syncplicity enterprise file sync and sharing solution. The Syncplicity policy-driven hybrid cloud will allow customers to utilize both private and public clouds simultaneously, automatically optimize storage utilization and performance, and adhere to security and regulatory compliance requirements based on user and content types.

    Syncplicity offers storage deployment options by selecting either a private cloud deployment through EMC Isilon Scale-out NAS or EMC Atmos object-based storage, or a public cloud option to store user files and version history and sync them across all their devices. The policy-driven hybrid cloud approach is critical because enterprises need a way to utilize different cloud deployment models to optimize storage utilization based on the file security and user requirements

  • Technology is a tool: We can print guns, but we can also print prosthetic limbs

    The same week that brought us a video of someone firing a gun built using parts manufactured on a 3D printer, on Wednesday offered us an inspiring story about using the same type of printer to manufacture a prosthetic hand for more than hundred times less than the cost of a traditional prosthetic set of fingers.

    The story of the Robohand is as inspiring as an Oprah interview. One of the participants, however, noted that he didn’t intend to help those missing a limb. Instead, he sought out a 3D printed hand to save himself after a wood working accident shaved off four of his fingers. And yet, thanks to a collaboration between carpenter Richard Van As in Johannesburg, and a Seattle prop designer a five-year old born without fingers now has a more functional hand.

    There’s also an Indigogo campaign to raise money to make more of these and help more children and adults born without fingers get their own Robohands. It’s heartwarming.

    The collaboration between the two also emphasizes the best of what the internet and connectivity has to offer. This story wouldn’t have happened without a 3D printer, but it also wouldn’t have happened without the rapid dissemination of information enabled by the internet. For example, the South African woodworker first learned about Ivan Owen in Seattle because a video Owen had done showing a robot hand he had made went viral.

    Then, there’s the building of the hand, which costs about $150. After Owen and Van As developed the plans for a hand, they made the plans open source and freely available on the internet. At a point where plenty of people are worrying about the IP infringement implications of 3D printing, such as printing out a proprietary design such as LEGOs or the dangers of evading regulations by printing harmful devices such as guns, this story is a reminder that people will use 3D printing for good as well.

    Yes, this story is being pushed hard by MakerBot, the company that makes 3D printers (there are more than 15,000 of them in use today), but it’s also a reminder that as any new technology is introduced it will be used for both good and bad. And with regulators having met last month in Washington DC a conference to discuss some of the implications of 3D printing technology, it’s good to remember that 3D printers are a tool capable of good or bad when pondering upcoming laws and regulations.

    We are lucky to live in a time when technological advances are making new things possible at pace that is possibly more rapid than any other time in human history. We have the rapid dissemination of knowledge and ability to share across continents thanks to broadband. Crowd funding tools now allow a wider spectrum of people to raise money for their ideas and we also have tools like 3D printing to turn digital designs into physical products.

    And perhaps most of all, we have an engaged community of people who have the technical know-how reaching out to those around the world who have the curiosity and intelligence to make a difference. Now those billions can have the tools as well.

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
    Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.

        

  • Charles Ramsey Turned Into Superman In This Video

    As previously suggested, it was only a matter of time before Charles Ramsey became a meme. Who better to help this along than Taiwanese animation studio Next Media Animation?

    Ramsey is the neighbor of the three brothers arrested for the kidnapping of three women in Cleveland a decade ago. The women, as you have no doubt heard, have been rescued, and though police have deemed Amand Berry the real hero here, Ramsey has received some credit and spotlight as well.

    Ramsey heard screams, and helped Berry open the door after she told him she’d been kidnapped. Here’s a new famous interview Ramsey did with a local FOX affiliate:

    And with that, we get NMA’s take:

    Enjoy more of NMA’s work here.

  • Teradata gets into the in-memory biz to take on SAP’s HANA

    Data analytics veteran Teradata will not let the new era of data-analysis architectures pass it by without a fight. It has already built products to address massive data volumes and Hadoop, and on Wednesday it announced an in-memory database technology to answer the industry’s latest call.

    Speed is the driving factory behind the in-memory analytics push that spans everyone from classic Teradata rivals like SAP and Oracle to startups such as MemSQL. Estimates vary as to the exact speed difference between data access in RAM versus hard disk, but Teradata is claiming RAM is 3,000 times faster. The speed difference between RAM and solid-state drives or flash memory is smaller, although still significant.

    Of course, cost also comes into play, as the speed and cost tend to go hand in hand when it comes to storage media. That’s one reason Teradata says its new technology, called Intelligent Memory, doesn’t operate fully in-memory like some competitive offerings do. Rather, it places only the “hottest” data in memory for super-fast analysis and spreads the rest between solid-state drives and disk within a Teradata environment.

    tdc2

    This concept of intelligent data placement has been around a while in the storage space (it’s part of EMC’s new ViPR software-defined storage platform, too), but the advent of big data and abundant flash has given it some new life. Many companies desire a tiered system in which they can pay more for fast access to their important or hot data, while saving some cash on lower-performance for their older and less-accessed data. Facebook is really pushing the envelope here with its cold storage initiative — something VP of Engineering Jay Parikh will likely discuss at our Structure conference June 19 and 20 in San Francisco.

    In analytics, though, RAM, not flash, is the fastest medium out there. Whether someone goes all-RAM or a tiered approach like Teradata pushing probably depends on how much performance they need across how much data, as well as how much they’re willing to pay. But if you’re doing interactive analytics in the next decade, they’re almost certain to be in-memory to some degree.

    Feature image courtesy of Shutterstock user Hellen Sergeyeva.

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
    Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.

        

  • Prepaid boosted T-Mobile customers last quarter, but 500K iPhones sold speaks to the future

    T-Mobile added 202,000 prepaid customers last quarter, helping to offset the 199,000 subscribers it lost. Sales of 500,000 Apple iPhones, however, speaks volumes towards the carrier’s future, which is looking a little brighter after its recent marriage to MetroPCSThe company announced subscriber numbers on Wednesday, in conjunction with its quarterly earnings. For the quarter, total revenues topped $4.67 billion, down 7.1 percent from the year ago quarter.

    Although the branded net customer additions numbered only 3,000, it was the first time that figure was positive since the first quarter of 2009. Customers on the network only tell half of the story though: Measuring monetization of customers through ARPU, or average revenue per user, is just as important.

    ARPU fell by 6.3 percent year-over-year to $54.07 for postpaid subscribers as the company says 36 percent of the customer base has switched to either a Value or Simple Choice plan. Once again, however, prepaid customers came to T-Mobile’s rescue: ARPU for this group rose 11.3 percent to $28.25.

    In March, T-Mobile introduced the Simple Choice offerings when it decoupled service plans from the price of hardware. As the company gains new customers — or has existing ones switch to newer phones — it will have an even greater number of people on the Simple Choice plans, which range from $50 to $70 per month.

    The company highlighted its $1.1 billion capital expenditures for the quarter, investing large sums in network modernization. T-Mobile began to move some services to different frequencies last year on its network in order to pave the way for LTE services. This also allows T-Mobile to carry a standard GSM iPhone, which will likely bring new customers. By the end of 2013, T-Mobile expects to cover up to 200 million people with its new LTE network.

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
    Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.

        

  • Riverbed Introduces Application Delivery as a Service

    Riverbed (RVBD) announced a new platform enabling any customer to deliver application delivery controller-as-a-service (ADCaaS) with the Stingray Services Controller. This new product will automate the deployment of application delivery services for any network architecture including software defined networking (SDN).

    With the evolving application and data center architectures, workflows, and operations models, an “ADC per application” deployment model is made possible through the Stingray Services Controller. Riverbed’s ADCaaS enabling technology now gives cloud providers and enterprises deploying in the private cloud the ability to automatically provision, deploy, license, meter, and manage their ADC inventory in an as-a-service model.

    Stingray Traffic Manager (STM) “micro” instances provide a consumption model for customers deploying ADC services. This eliminates the traditional throughput-based ADC sizing model that forces customers to guess their traffic load and pre-procure ADC capabilities in advance. With the STM “micro” instance, ADC services can now be elastically scaled on demand and right-sized to suit each application in the data center, offering high density, full isolation, and multi-tenancy scaling.

    “With the emergence of the virtualized data center, legacy ADCs can be a bottleneck and were starting to be excluded from virtualization strategies and cloud deployments,” said Jeff Pancottine, senior vice president and general manager of the Riverbed Stingray application delivery business unit. “With Stingray Services Controller, customers will have a hyper-elastic ADC platform that can adapt to workload changes. This is a game changer – today we are introducing a software-defined application delivery fabric that enables Layer 7 services on top of any data center architecture.”

    “Riverbed’s Stingray Services Controller and the Joyent high-performance cloud will enable our customers to provision, license, and scale ADC services in a very easy, agile, and cost effective way,” said Jason Hoffman, founder and chief technology officer, Joyent. “This ground-breaking, high-performance approach maps to our DNA and will enable us to deploy and manage ADCs in a truly elastic cloud delivery model.”

  • Fortune: When it comes to the Apple-Samsung patent war, WSJ misses the point

    Apple Samsung Patent War
    According to Fortune’s Apple 2.0 blog, The Wall Street Journal’s recent report suggesting that the smartphone patent wars have been a big bust for all involved misses the point. Fortune’s Philip Elmer-DeWitt writes that while much of the Journal’s argument makes sense, the paper fails to differentiate between standards-essential patents (SEPs) and non-essential patents, and therefore fails to distinguish between claims made by Apple from claims made by the likes of Samsung.

    Continue reading…

  • Google Translate Adds Bosnian, Cebuano, Hmong, Javanese & Marathi

    Google announced that it has added support for five new languages to Google Translate, which brings the total to over 70 languages supported.

    The new languages are: Bosnian, Cebuano, Hmong, Javanese and Marathi. All of them except for Bosnian are considered to be in alpha status, so they still have a lot of work to do, but the company says it will continue to test and improve them in time.

    “If you took a quick snapshot of content available on the web, you might think that everyone around the world spoke English, Chinese, French or Spanish,” says Google Translate program manager Sveta Kelman. “But in fact, millions of people around the world speak an incredible array of languages that currently have a small presence across the web.”

    “Google Translate helps bridge the divide between the content available online and people’s ability to access that information,” says Kelman.

    According to Google, the five new languages are spoken by a combined 183 million people.

    You can access the new languages at translate.google.com or via the Android or iOS apps.

  • Saul Bass Google Doodle Hits The Rest Of The World

    As previously reported, Google has been running a Google doodle honoring Saul Bass in parts of the world where it is May 8th. The doodle has now worked its way over to our neck of the woods in the U.S.

    Saul Bass was an American graphic designer who passed away in April of 1996. May 8th is his birthday (he was born in 1920).

    Even if you have never heard of Saul Bass, it’s nearly impossible to not be familiar with at least some of his work. You can watch Google’s doodle animation, and see if anything sticks out to you.

    Bass is mostly known for designing film title sequences, film posters, and corporate logos. Some of his most famous work includes the title sequence to Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho, and the AT&T and Bell logos. He also designed the logos for Continental and United Airlines.

    Following is a list of his work.

    Film title sequences:

    Carmen Jones (1954)
    The Big Knife (1955)
    The Man with the Golden Arm (1955)
    The Racers (1955)
    The Seven Year Itch (1955)
    The Shrike (1955)
    Around the World in Eighty Days (1956)
    Storm Center (1956)
    Attack (1956)
    Edge of the City (1957)
    Saint Joan (1957)
    The Pride and the Passion (1957)
    The Young Stranger (1957)
    Bonjour Tristesse (1958)
    Cowboy (1958)
    Vertigo (1958)
    The Big Country (1958)
    Anatomy of a Murder (1959)
    North by Northwest (1959)
    Psycho (1960)
    Spartacus (1960)
    The Facts of Life (1960)
    Exodus (1960)
    Ocean’s 11 (1960)
    West Side Story (1961)
    Something Wild (1961)
    Advise and Consent (1962)
    Walk on the Wild Side (1962)
    The Victors (1963)
    Nine Hours to Rama (1963)
    It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963)
    The Cardinal (1963)
    In Harm’s Way (1965)
    Bunny Lake Is Missing (1965)
    Grand Prix (1966)
    Not with My Wife, You Don’t! (1966)
    Seconds (1966)
    Such Good Friends (1971)
    That’s Entertainment, Part II (1976)
    Broadcast News (1987)
    Big (1988)
    The War of the Roses (1989)
    Goodfellas (1990)
    Cape Fear (1991)
    Doc Hollywood (1991)
    Mr. Saturday Night (1992)
    The Age of Innocence (1993)
    Higher Learning (1995)
    Casino (1995)

    Movie posters:

    Carmen Jones (1954)
    The Man with the Golden Arm (1955)
    Edge of the City (1956)
    Storm Center (1956)
    Love in the Afternoon (1957)
    Saint Joan (1957)
    Bonjour Tristesse (1958)
    The Big Country (1958) (style b poster)
    Vertigo (1958)
    Anatomy of a Murder (1959)
    Exodus (1960)
    The Magnificent Seven (1960) (design not used)
    One, Two, Three (1961)
    Advise & Consent (1962)
    It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963)
    The Cardinal (1963)
    In Harm’s Way (1964)
    Bunny Lake is Missing (1965)
    The Firemen’s Ball (1967)
    The Two of Us (1967)
    Why Man Creates (1968)
    Very Happy Alexander (1969)
    Exodus (1960)
    The Magnificent Seven (1960) (design not used)
    One, Two, Three (1961)
    Advise & Consent (1962)
    It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963)
    The Cardinal (1963)
    In Harm’s Way (1964)
    Bunny Lake is Missing (1965)
    The Firemen’s Ball (1967)
    The Two of Us (1967)
    Why Man Creates (1968)
    Very Happy Alexander (1969)
    Such Good Friends (1971)
    Rosebud (1975)
    Brothers (1977)
    Notes on the Popular Arts (1977)
    Bass on Titles (1978)
    The Human Factor (1979)
    The Shining (1980)
    The Solar Film (1980)
    Return from the River Kwai (1989)
    Schindler’s List (1993)

    Logos and designs:

    Alcoa (1963)
    AT&T Corporation (1969 and 1983)
    Avery International (1975)
    Boys & Girls Clubs of America (1980)
    Celanese (1965)
    Continental Airlines (1968)[10]
    Dixie (1969)
    Frontier Airlines (1978)
    Fuller Paints (1962)
    Geffen Records (1980)
    General Foods (1984)
    Girl Scouts of the USA (1978)
    Japan Energy Corporation (1993)
    J. Paul Getty Trust (1993)
    Kibun Foods (1984)
    Kose Cosmetics (1991)
    Lawry’s Foods (1959)
    Minami Sports (1991)
    Minolta (1978)
    NCR Corporation (1996)
    Quaker Oats (1969)
    Rockwell International (1968)
    Security Pacific Bank (1966)
    United Airlines (1974)
    United Way (1972)
    US Postage (1983)[11]
    Warner Communications (1974)
    Wienerschnitzel (1978)
    Wesson Oil (1964)
    YWCA (1988)

  • I’ll Take the Cabinet With the Wide Screen, Please

    sportscenter-cage

    (Photo: Mark Imbriaco via Twitter)

    “Does your datacenter cage have SportsCenter?” This photo tweet yesterday by Mark Imbriaco, who works on the Technical Operations team at GitHub, was too good not to share. Imbriaco, who has previously worked at LivingSocial, Salesforce.com, Heroku, 37Signals and AOL, has clearly seen more than few cages in his time, and knows the value of some customization.

    We recently shared the trend toward worker-friendly amenities in newer data center projects. But Imbriaco’s tweet raises another aspect of this issue: what are the best ways to personalize space within your cages and data center suites? Share your favorites in our comments.

  • Here comes the iPhone 5S: Next-gen iPhone display production to begin next month

    iPhone 5S Release Date
    Apple’s iPhone 5S is still eagerly awaited despite the expectation that it will be an iterative update similar to the bump from iPhone 4 to iPhone 4S, and now we’re one step closer to seeing the handset launch. According to a report from Japan’s Nikkan Kogyo Shimbun, Apple supplier Sharp will begin mass production of the iPhone 5S’s display next month. LG Display and Japan Display will supply Apple with next-generation iPhone displays as well, according to the report.

    Continue reading…

  • US Senate Passes Internet Sales Tax

    According to CNet

    The U.S. Senate on Monday approved a controversial bill by more than a 2-to-1 margin that would allow states to levy taxes on Internet purchases.

    The Marketplace Fairness Act, which would allow states to require online vendors to collect sales and use tax on certain out-of-state purchases, was approved in a bipartisan vote of 69 to 27. The bill, which already has the support of President Obama, will now move on to the House of Representatives.

    If approved, the bill would overturn a 1992 Supreme Court ruling that found out-of-state retailers generally don’t have to collect taxes unless they have a sufficient business presence. The bill, officially known as S.743, does include an exception for businesses that make under $1 million a year in revenue.

    I’ve written about the Marketplace Fairness Act in the past. The push to tax has come from two fronts. First large businesses, especially those with a brick and mortar presence who are already paying taxes. Second local governments have been pushing to increase tax base. The push against the tax has come from small businesses and entrepreneurs – and I suppose folks who harken back to the early days of the Internet when there was a feeling of wilderness and self-policing.

  • Sorcery! Review (iOS)

    The first installment of the four-part Sorcery! series created by Steve Jackson in early ‘80s has recently made its debut on iOS platform.

    Unlike other tablet-top games that encourage multiplayer gaming, Sorcery! is all about single-playing. The title presents itself as an adventure gamebook series that mixes RPG elements and a unique combat system.
    <... (read more)

  • DFT Building Massive New Data Center in Ashburn

    acc7-campus

    An aerial view of DuPont Fabros Technology’s Ashburn Corporate Center, showing the five existing data centers and the future location of the new ACC7 facility. (Image: DuPont Fabros)

    DuPont Fabros Technology has begun work on a huge new data center on its campus in Ashburn Corporate Center campus in northern Virginia, the company said Tuesday. The new ACC7 facility will be the largest project yet for the data center developer, with a whopping 41.6 megawatts of power.

    The company has been signaling its intent to build additional space in northern Virginia for some time. Now that it has completely filled its ACC6 data center, DuPont Fabros Technology (DFT) sees the need to have additional capacity ready for its customers, which include some of the fastest-growing Internet companies.

    “Leasing has been very strong at the Ashburn campus,” said Hossein Fateh, President and CEO of DuPont Fabros Technology. “Historically, as we announce a new building, a considerable amount of space gets pre-leased prior to delivery. Given the strength of this market, we have commenced development of 11.89 megawatts of ACC7, and expect it to be delivered in the second quarter of 2014.”

    More Capacity, but Smaller Increments

    The new data center will bring substantial new inventory online in one of the industry’s busiest markets. DFT has previously built its facilities in phases of 13 megawatts at a time. ACC7 will feature the first use of a new design that allows the company to add capacity in smaller chunks. For ACC7, the base “building block” will be 5.9 megawatts, with the first phase comprising two blocks of space.

    Fateh says the new design can work in increments as small as 4.5 megawatts and still meet DuPont Fabros’ goals for return on its investment.

    “We expect 3 major benefits from the new design,” said Fateh. “First, we expect to achieve a PUE of 1.2 directly benefiting our tenant’s overall expense structure. Second, moving to a single electrical ring bus provides more resiliency and help us decrease our development cost. Third, we’re now capable of delivering our products in smaller increments, which enables us to accurately match supply and demand while reducing the risk of CapEx spend and carrying costs.”

    DuPont Fabros said it expects the construction of the conduit system and first 11.89 megawatts of capacity to cost between $7 million and $7.9 million per megawatt, for a total cost of $155 million to $160 million.

  • Iron Mountain is Taking the Data Center Underground

    ironmountain-cave-470

    Racks of servers reside next to the limestone wall of an underground cave inside an Iron Mountain data center in the Underground in Boyers, Pa. (Photo: Iron Mountain)

    After several years of quietly developing space in its massive underground facility in Pennsylvania, Iron Mountain is entering the data center business in a bigger way. The company has announced plans to build and lease data centers, offering both colocation services and wholesale suites to enterprise and government customers.

    Iron Mountain is building out data center space within the Underground, its 145-acre records storage facility located 220 feet underground in a former limestone mine in Boyers, Pa., about 50 miles north of Pittsburgh. The facility has long been used for storing paper records and tape archives, and has an existing workforce of 2,700 employees, as well as its own restaurant, fire department, water treatment plant and back-up power.

    But the Underground also offers a naturally low ambient temperature of 52 degrees, and has an underground lake that can be used to provide cool water for data center cooling systems, eliminating the expense of energy-hungry chillers. Iron Mountain developed a proof-of-concept facility known as Room 48, and has subsequently leased data center space to Marriott and several government agencies.

    Leveraging its Corporate DNA

    With the launch of Iron Mountain Data Centers, the company is seeking to leverage both the Underground facility and its existing document storage relationships with many of the nation’s largest IT users.

    “We spent a lot of time looking at the data center market,” said Mark Kidd, senior vice president and general manager of data centers for Iron Mountain. “Most of today’s data center providers sell space. We’re packaging together services that will enable enterprises to outsource the ongoing management of their data center. We want to make it easier for enterprises to outsource. And our DNA in tracking information assets from creation to disposition is particularly differentiating for organizations that must comply with industry regulations. No one in today’s data center market has our track record in security and facilitating compliance.”

    Kidd says Iron Mountain is building “several megawatts” of speculative technical space at the Underground to get its data center program rolling. Up to 10 megawatts of critical power is available, Kidd said. The facility currently has two carriers available, but will add two more within the next 90 days and expects to have six providers in the facility within 6 months.

    “The fact that it is an active multi-tenant data center makes it pretty easy to get carriers in,” said Kidd of the 1.7 million square foot facility. “We are currently a living, breathing, enormous facility with lots of space to build out.”

    The Data Bunker Goes Wholesale

    Iron Mountain’s strategy will provide the largest test yet of the appetite for underground “data bunkers,” bringing scale and marketing muscle to a niche that has been largely limited to smaller providers. These “nuke proof” underground facilities are often based in caves or former telecom or military installations, and appeal to tenants seeking highly secure space, such as government agencies, financial services firms, and healthcare providers or other enterprises with high compliance requirements.

    By bringing a wholesale offering into the data bunker space, Iron Mountain is bringing a name brand into the data bunker space, which may capture the interest of national customers considering underground space. The company is offering both retail colocation space and wholesale suites. Services being offered include engineering and design, development and construction, and ongoing facility operations and management.

    In 2008, Marriott leased 12,500 square feet of space to establish a data center in the Underground for disaster recovery purposes.

    “We have always had a rigorous and constant focus on having disaster preparedness in place,” said Dan Blanchard, vice president of enterprise operations at Marriott. “More than five years ago, we determined that we needed more flexibility and we got it. Today we have a data center that provides Marriott with a tremendous capability for disaster recovery, and we have a great partner in Iron Mountain.”

    Looking Beyond the Underground

    In the short term, Iron Mountain’s data center business will focus on the Pennsylvania facility. But the company realizes that a long-term data center strategy will need to include facilities in more than one market.

    Kidd notes that Iron Mountain has the real estate portfolio to make that possible. The company operates 800 facilities, and owns about 40 percent of those sites. The company is in the process of converting to a real estate investment trust (REIT), a process it hopes to complete by the beginning of 2014.

    A REIT is a corporation or trust that uses the pooled capital of many investors to purchase and manage income property. Income comes from the rent and leasing of the properties, and REITs are legally required to distribute 90 percent of their taxable income to investors. Three of the largest public data center developers – Digital Realty (DLR), DuPont Fabros (DFT) and CoreSite Realty (COR) – are organized as REITs.

    ironmountain-lake-470

    This underground lake provides chilled water for the cooling systems at Iron Mountain’s underground facilities in Boyer, Pa., which allows the facility to operate without chillers. (Photo: Iron Mountain)

  • T-Mobile’s Q1 earnings, revenue dip; 500,000 iPhones sold in under a month

    T-Mobile Earnings Q1 2013
    T-Mobile US on Wednesday posted first-quarter financial results for the pre-merger T-Mobile USA, which saw earnings and revenue continue to slide. Adjusted EBITDA of $1.2 billion was down more than 7% from the first quarter last year, and revenue sank 7% to $4.7 billion. The carrier finished the March quarter with approximately 34 million subscribers, an increase of about 579,000 customers. T-Mobile added 3,000 net branded subscribers but it lost 199,000 net postpaid customers in the quarter.

    Continue reading…

  • GigaOM Chrome Show 4: Rockin’ the Chrome OS Dev channel

    On the all-Chrome podcast this week, we start out with news of Asus getting into the Chrome hardware market later this year and how Intel’s upcoming new Atom chip could prime the pump for all-day battery life on Chromebooks.

    From a personal standpoint, Chris has had a few problems on the Stable channel with his Chromebook while Kevin is enjoying all the new features of the Dev channel. A few new tips are shared — including where to get a Chromebook at a discount — as well as our extension of the week for Chrome and Chrome OS.

    Show notes

    Hosts: Chris Albrecht and Kevin C. Tofel

    Got questions, tips or tricks for an upcoming GigaOM Chrome Show? Find Kevin on Google+, Twitter (@kevinctofel) or via e-mail ([email protected])

    (download this episode)

    Subscribe to RSS

    iTunes

    Stitcher Radio

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
    Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.

        

  • How Nest and Opower quietly morphed into competitors

    Energy startups Nest and Opower are members of an elite club: venture capital-backed companies that have managed to find some success building software and hardware around managing home energy consumption. Several years ago when the companies launched, they focused on very different products and business models. However, over the years the companies have moved ever closer to becoming direct competitors, and now stand in the interesting position of being two of the leading startups competing in a variety of ways to reduce consumers’ home energy use.

    Evolution of the home energy market

    That Nest and Opower have emerged as the leading companies fighting over this business says something about the small and slow-moving industry. Over the years the market for devices, websites and services that attempt to get consumers to reduce their energy use — a largely unsexy and unappreciated task — has been riddled with struggling startups and failed clunky product launches.

    Nest 2G_3-4_Dramatic_heatUI

    Home energy dashboards never made a dent with consumers. Various startups from Tendril to EnergyHub realized early on that high-end energy dasboards were not the way to go. People don’t care enough about energy and didn’t want to spend money on an energy-specific device.

    At the same time, residential-focused energy efficiency services from utilities have taken years to roll out in any meaningful way. Utilities are notoriously slow moving and cautious. Companies that tried to work in these markets got frustrated, too. Google and Microsoft both shut down their energy efficiency web tools after failing to gain much interest or develop any partnerships.

    Opower’s entrance

    When Opower launched almost six years ago, it found early success with an energy efficiency product that provided immediate value to utilities: mailed energy reports. While Opower has always been an energy software and data company, it were these mailed reports that were initially valuable to utilities that (particularly back then) had unsophisticated digital presences.

    Honeywell & Opower's iPad smart thermostat app

    Honeywell & Opower’s iPad smart thermostat app

    The Opower reports came in envelopes that looked like bills (so were almost always opened) and they used behavioral techniques (smiley faces, peer competition) to gently convince the utility customer to reduce consumption. The mailed reports were also relatively inexpensive compared to home energy devices and dashboards.

    But over the years Opower has had to morph into a company that largely sells digital energy data products to utilities. There’s only so much business — and so much effect on consumer behavior — that paper reports can have.

    Opower now largely interacts with utility customers through email, text messages, and websites. Its newer digital products include a Facebook app and more recently software for connected thermostats, in partnership with thermostat giant Honeywell.

    Opower’s work with Honeywell and its connected thermostat product was one of the first indicators of how competitive Opower and Nest could become. The thermostat has emerged as the great hope for creating a gateway into home energy efficiency following the demise of the energy dashboard. In addition, Honeywell saw Nest as a pretty direct threat, having previously sued Nest over patent infringement around the learning thermostat.

    OpowerFacebookapp

    It’s unclear how much success the Honeywell/Opower thermostat is having, given that it’s such a new product. PG&E was the first utility that piloted it and some early results suggested that customers liked using the smart thermostats and particularly liked being able to remotely control the thermostat using their iPhone.

    But one of the key differences between Opower and Nest’s business models is clear through that partnership. Opower’s utility products are almost always white-labelled for utilities, so, for example, if it creates a website and system of emails and texts for PG&E customers, then Opower’s alerts are branded with PG&E’s logo. In contrast, Nest has long been focused on selling directly to consumers and building a consumer brand.

    Nest emerges

    Nest was officially launched toward the end of 2011, though the company had been building its technology for a year and half before that. Its core business philosophy involves the production of a well-designed thermostat that users would covet and that could also collect data about the user and learn their behavior. The thermostat can use that knowledge to shave off between 20 and 30 percent of the user’s monthly heating and cooling, and Nest has mostly focused on selling the thermostat directly to consumers.

    But Nest has more recently started to move into offering utilities and energy service providers energy efficiency services. Last month Nest launched a variety of energy services, including demand response, and also this week acquired a startup, MyEnergy, that aggregates and analyzes utility data. It’s clear that one of the most important aspects of the Nest thermostat is the services that can be run based on both the consumer’s individual and the collective Nest users’ data.

    Nest

    Nest appears to want to maintain its brand and its ability to connect directly with customers. When it launched its energy services last month, the company told me that its services sit between the consumer and the utility. It also approves eligible customers and monitors how the services are performing and how the customers are reacting.

    This direct-to-consumer approach could also prove useful if (and when) Nest launched any more connected home products in the future.

    Power in the data

    Essentially, both Nest and Opower are cloud-based data analytics companies that are using various — and increasingly competitive — ways to access home energy data. Nest calls its cloud-based big data algorithms Auto-Tune, and the data that is collected is from its increasingly large amount of thermostats being installed throughout the world.

    Opower has built out its big data platform, Opower 4, which collects data from at least 75 utilities, processes data from more than 50 million homes, and has 15 million homes fully connected into the Opower platform. Opower is analyzing 16 percent of all of the smart meters in the U.S.

    google data center

    Each company’s approach has unique benefits and hurdles. Opower has been widely successful with utilities using the approach of starting out with a basic data analytics service, and adding on more complexity and control over time. Utilities are hard customers to win over, so the benefits of winning their business early is invaluable. Nest, with its direct to consumer approach, could be slightly threatening to some of the more conservative utilities.

    Nest, on the other hand, has the capacity to build a consumer brand that can make money from direct consumer electronics sales as well as working with energy service providers. Opower has little consumer brand presence and mostly subverts its brand to its utility customers.

    Which method will prove more successful over time? It’ll be interesting to see, but in reality there will be room for both. It’s also refreshing to see different types of innovation and execution in the home energy efficiency space — an industry that has been neglected for quite a long time.

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
    Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.