Pulse comes to Frankfurt – PCTY2010

Events No Comments »
Google Buzz

Last week I attended Pulse Comes To You 2010 in Frankfurt. This great one-day event series tries to capture the Pulse spirit and bring it to a number of major cities around the globe. The german issue, which attracted round about 180 people, was hosted by Tivoli’s General Manager Al Zollar in Frankfurt.

Pulse comes to You

The agenda was split into a generall session in the morning and workshop sessions in the afternoon. After German Tivoli Business Unit Executive Oliver Grell’s welcome note, Al Zollar took the stage and presented IBMs vision on Integrated Service Management, which is the foundation for their Smarter Planet vision. He showed how Tivoli tools like Maximo Asset Management will help us to manage growing complexity of IT systems and plenty of other devices beeing around in todays technical infrastructure. After presenting a couple of case studies from various customers and annouced partnerships with Ricoh, Johnson Controls and Juniper Networks.

 A second keynote was held by Forrester Research Director Thomas Mendel, Ph. D. who presentend Forresters view on IT Management 2.0. He made some interesting comments on the importance of infrastructure & operation for 2010 spendings and said the that the biggest concern for IT managers is, that they fear to be unable to support business growth in these troubled times. A new approach for IT Management 2.0 that Forrester promotes is  “Do less. But do those things superbly!“, which is quite a step-up from the much overstressed “Do more with less” meme. More interesting comments from Forrester were, that ‘Service Catalogues’ are currently the second most requested topic at Forrester and the  recommendation to build a “Just enough CMDB“, which from my point of view should be common sense, not to mention the usual call to “Break down the silos” and “know your Business” for Operations. Mendel concluded that Tivoli should grow into an abstraction layer between infrastrure/applications and the business processes.

Following the Forrester keynote was an fresh talk from geman author, management trainer and lateral thinker Anja Foerster, who tried to motivate the audience to expand their horizons and go for unconventinal solutions. After an excursion into examples of cross-industry innovations, she described homogeneity as the true killer of innovation and asked the audience to forster diversity amongst their subordinates and coworkers. Contradiction lays ground for creativity.

After the lunch break PCTY2010 contiued in 4 parallel workshop tracks, headlined

  • Late-breaking Service Management
  • Service Management for IT
  • Service Management for Development and Deployment
  • Technical News

where IBMers, partners and german customers presented a number of  Tivoli and Service Management related sessions (see Agenda). The day closed with a Get-Together and Dinner, where all attendees had the chance to get hold of the specialists and to continue the discussion.

All in all I had a great day, talking to many people and listening to interesting talks and sessions, but I’m confident that next year I will have the chance to go for the “real thing” in Las Vegas again.

What was really a pity that there was no Social Media coverage at all: There have be a handfull of Tweets – about 90 percent of them were sent be me (@rjudas) and some by IBMer Ingo Averdunk (@ingoa). I haven’t found any picures on Flickr, nor any blog article, yet, so:

Come on IBM, you can do better.

Virtual Datacenter insights

Automation No Comments »
Google Buzz

Ok, I may not have been too enthusiastic in writing about our Pulse visit up until now, but as we just enjoyed a really great session about virtualized datacenters I thought this would be a good reason to start doing so. Ok, it’s quite a different kind of automation compared to what we deal with usually, but it was quite impressive to see a reporting service being installed “on demand” on a virtualization cluster during the demo part of the session by means of just a few clicks in Tivoli Provisioning Manager. Ok, so you may wonder what is so exciting about the automated installation of a virtual system? Well, aside from the fact that you felt that the speaker (Vanja Gorazi) was really deep into the technical stuff behind it, it was probably that the way this happened was simply done right. Instead of specifying you need an xOS with ySQL to support the zReporting system, you simply choose the type of service needed and do not need to worry about all packaging and stuff behind the scenes. Oh, and did I mention that automation didn’t stop with the installation but continued with automatic addition of required or removal of unused resources by means of a component named Intelligent Orchestrator? Of course, the rules engine behind it sounded quite basic, so I guess there may will be some more interesting perspectives around here… guess I’ll need some time to think about that when this is over…

What does IBM Tivoli want to Automate tomorrow?

Social Impact of Automation No Comments »
Google Buzz

I know it. So does does Dave Bartlett @ IBM. <SHORT_PEEK>

I wish Dave had given more information about their showcase.

But wait, doesn’t this showcase sound familiar to me? Yes, I knew it. The “Microsoft Home of the future” <READ_HERE>. Interesting. These ‘home’ thing is a good idea to create a personal relationship between the customers/partners and the vendors technology and research.

Roland

Top