May 17, 2012

EMCWorld 2010 : A Week to Remember

Even though EMCWorld has been over for a few weeks I still wanted I get this post out telling my experience. I have been so busy that I just now got this finished.

I have not had a very long career. In fact compared to most of the guys on the team I belong to, I am the newborn calf quivering on shaky legs. But, I can say that I have had a pretty exciting one so far. I have never been short on challenges and deadlines. And I have always been surrounded by incredibly skilled people (especially now). That said, without a doubt, EMCWorld 2010 was the pinnacle of my career so far.

I really do not know how to recap everything. In some parts I am going to feel like I am bragging (which I hate to do). In others, that I am taking credit for what is essentially just good timing. But I feel this experience needs to be shared and I will try my best to keep it simple. This is longer than my normal posts so I ask your forgiveness ahead of time.

Really, a combination of events built upon each other starting with VMware’s Tech Summit. I got invited by Chris Horn (a newly married guy now) a fellow vSpecialist to help him build the lab with Stephen Spellicy, Tee Glasgow, and Brian Lewis. The idea to use the Celerra VSA for this was not mine; but it was through this first exposure I started down the road in creating the Celerra VSA UBER edition.

To help with the Tech Summit labs I created the new UBER VSA, wrote lab control PowerShell scripts, and built most of the VCenter stuff within. Because there were issues related to some bad hardware I volunteered to show up early to Tech Summit in San Francisco and make sure everything was up for when the crew that was going to run the lab arrived.

Arriving early ended up being a good idea but with a team effort the labs went perfectly.

Because of my help with the TechSummit labs I got asked to help with the VPlex demo for EMCWorld. This started out with just ironing out some issues. Next thing you know I am taking ideas from Chad and Stephen Spellicy and turning them into monitoring tabs and plugins to automate the demo.

For weeks up to EMCWorld I was furiously coding away trying to make everything perfect. I must have performed over 50,000 VMotions on the VPlex. I even wrote a program that would do an entire teleport of 500 VM’s from one site to another, collect statistics on timing and performance, and then move them back. This would run continuously allowing me to test different aspects(tune) and ensure stability.

I left TechSummit early, got home, changed the clothes in my suitcase, and hopped a plane to North Carolina for a week of training. And from training I went straight to EMCWorld.

It was on the plane to EMCWorld that I had the idea to create something that allows the audience to see the teleports happening in real time. I ended up writing a C# WebApp that used AJAX to pull metrics from the vTeleport plugin I wrote and update asynchronously to a vCenter tab. By the time I landed in Boston I had the WebApp running perfectly. I used another application I wrote that simulated the vTeleports to code against since I could not access the lab equipment (it was in the loading dock at EMCWorld).

I arrived at EMCWorld a couple days before the big day (Monday Keynote) and wrote the UI for the new monitoring tab. After the equipment was live on stage, I loaded everything up (with Spellicy and Chad standing right by).

And it worked. 500 VM’s VMotioned in ~20 minutes, all live on the massive high-def screens on stage. The plugin worked. The teleport logic worked. It moved quickly. And my new monitoring tab looked perfect.

I can’t remember anything I have ever done working on the first try so I was beside myself in excitement. In a moment I will always remember, Chad turned to me and said “Nick, you are a freak. You know that?” Coming from a Master of technology like Chad Sakac you can’t get greater praise.

Fast forward to Monday @ 2:00pm… Pat Gelsinger, the new COO of EMC, was getting ready to walk out and introduce the world to the V-Plex. I was on the front row sweating bullets with Chris Horn and Stephen Spellicy on each side giving me encouragement. Behind me were three rows of my vSpecialist team- all arrayed in their cool shirts and representing what has to be the best group of technologists in the world today.

We were supposed to have a recorded video to use if something horrible happened. But we ran out of time to record it and Pat is the kind of guy who likes things live.

So here I am, sitting on the front row of an EMCWorld keynote. I am so new to this team I am not even through new hire training. And the COO of EMC is about to give a presentation on what is one of the most powerful technologies to be released by EMC, ever. This keynote demo is riding on the fact that:

  1. My plugin runs correctly
  2. My backend code executes the teleport workflow correctly.
  3. The vCenter and ESX servers do 500 VMotions without issue (and inside 22 minutes)
  4. And my WebApp is able to grab data and display it within vCenter without a hitch.

I am at this point thinking: “This is either one of the greatest moments of my career- or the moment I decide to switch to something else to do for a living.”

A few minutes later the moment of truth came. Chad joined Pat out on the stage. Chad talked about how cool it would be to move running virtual machines between datacenters and across storage resources. The main screen displays the VI Client console. He right clicks on the Datacenter. Moves down and selects the “vTeleport” option. And then he clicks on “Teleport to Hopkinton” (VM’s were in Boston). Now I knew that it takes about 10-18 seconds before VM’s start moving (inventory, location logic, etc). Chad knew this too and as they chatted for a bit about what was going to happen as I held my breath and I think almost all the other vSpecialists did too.

And then it happened. They started moving just as they were supposed to. All of a sudden I started getting slaps on the back and arms from my team as I stared up at those huge screens and thought: “Wow, it worked.” Chad and Pat moved on to talk about the use cases and progress. But for me, all the work and late hours had come to fruition. I was exhausted mentally and physically from the last month but absolutely overjoyed that all that work had paid off.

That moment was not mine. The team knew what I did but, that moment was a watershed for a lot of people in and outside of EMC. Virtualization is a core part of the future and the vSpecialist team as a group is uniquely staffed and positioned to make this future a reality. All I did was demonstrate in my small way what my team is capable of in many many different ways. That moment was for my team.

There were several other moments that I will never forget:

Later that evening the vSpecialists as a team were meeting at a restaurant for dinner. I had headed back to the hotel to change and literally passed out on the bed exhausted. I awoke with a start about 50 minutes later and realized I was late for the dinner.

I texted a buddy that was there telling him I was on the way and hopped in a taxi to the restaurant. As I walked up the stairs into the dining room I saw my team occupying two very long tables across the room. As I started to walk across the room, I was just some punk geek who overslept and felt like a heel for showing up late. And something happened that has never happened to me before. The entire team stood up and started clapping and cheering as I walked towards them. I didn’t even know how to react so I just hustled to my seat and sat down while looking embarrassed. I think the moment I realized they were cheering me, as I stood in the middle of that big room, I almost cried (yeah call me sappy). To be honored is one thing. But, to be honored by a group of people you hold in the most respect is something entirely different.

Later that week in our team meeting Chad thanked me for my work on the Celerra VSA and VPlex demo. I got rewarded with an iPad and another standing ovation from my team.

All the time I am thinking to myself: “Two years ago I walked around EMCWorld and would have never imagined anything like this could happen.”

So there is my story of one of the greatest weeks of my short career. I can’t imagine working for a better group of people or a company that is as well positioned to take me places. It is amazing what a great product, a great team, and a little luck mixed with some good old fashioned hard work can do.

Couple things I want to clear up since I get asked:

The vTeleport plugin used at EMCWorld was actually quite simple. There is a *real* plugin in the works (which I have seen personally) which is actually quite awesome. Mine was a way to demonstrate what is coming. I am turning the code I used for this into something quite cool for the VMware community (free cool tool). Look for it before VMworld this year.

The VPlex demo was REAL. There was no video and no net. Everything was live. Having probably done more VMotions on a VPlex than anyone outside the people that created it, I can say this; it is awesome and is almost too easy to forget it is even there.

It would be really cool if you could share your own stories of similar awesome moments you have had. Feel free to leave a comment or link to your own story. And thank you to all who attended EMCWorld.

.nick

A little bit of good news : VMware vExpert

Man what a roller coaster ride my life has been this year:

  1. I started a new job with EMC on the vSpecialist team
  2. Released my major update to the vSphere Mini Monitor
  3. Created the Celerra VSA UBER edition (now version 2)
  4. Helped create the VMware TechSummit labs(VSA, lab automation)
  5. Helped create the keynote demo for the announcement of the VPlex at EMCWorld 2010 (vSphere Plugin, automation scripts, Teleportation GUI, performance tuning).

I had just spent the last two days in Atlanta helping the rocking vSpecialist team redesign their lab network. This is the granddaddy of all the vSpecialist labs with tons of great demos we use frequently (live or recorded). They have grown so much they actually outgrew their original network design. I was on a plane about to take off back to Dallas when I pulled up my personal email on my iPad. In it I had an email from John Troyer informing me I had been made a vExpert for 2010. I just about leapt up in my cramped airline seat.

This is an extreme honor as I hold so many of 2009 vExperts in such high regard. Still a little humbling to imagine myself as part of this group but, I take this as a sign that the direction I am going is a good one. And will use it as motivation to do more for the VMware Community.

I wanted to give a big Thank You to John Troyer and his team for all the hard work they do. I also want to thank my fellow coworkers back at ThinkCash(now Think Finance), the VMware Community, Chad Sakac and his killer management team, and those great vSpecialists that keep me challenged on a daily basis.

I will try my best to represent this honor well.

.nick

 

EMC Certification : My Experience

Yesterday I officially passed my first EMC certification test. I am now a full fledged EMCPA! So I know, this isn’t the highest-level and I am not going to impress the ladies down at the civic center. But, this is the first *storage* certificate for me and I am happier than a tornado in a trailer park.

I am working towards the Technical Architect track and so this test (E20-001) was the first step. I went through the Web Classroom training which was good. But the real secret is studying the ISM book (Amazon link).

I really enjoyed the material on fibre-channel protocol and the in-depth work calculating IOPs/capacity. I ended up making a huge Excel spreadsheet so I could play with the formulas.

The test was challenging. Some of the questions were not in the book or Web training and instead required some careful thought. Knowing your data replication methods and SAN topologies (even FC-AL) is extremely important.

I take tests more to help advance my knowledge (forced studying goals) than to get a certificate. I think EMC certification tracks will definitely add value to you as an individual. The track I am on is for employee/partners only. But they have a multitude of tracks available for customers also.

Take a look at their certification framework here.

So what is next for me? Well my CCNA is expiring in October, so I am going to focus on the CCNP composite test next. I will be using a combination of Boson NetSim and Train Signal material.

.nick

Change is good : Fear & Atmosphere

This post is a big deal for me personally. It is the first public acknowledgment of a major change in my life. This blog post will be about me announcing this change; but it will also be about why I am doing it and what lessons I feel can be learned. I had a good boss for three years who had a funny saying I think fits here. “The only thing stopping you is fear and atmosphere.” Every time I pitched an idea to him that he was okay with, he would say those words. What they basically mean, is that the only things between you and your goal is your own fear and the air between you and getting started on it.

I feel those words really fit for this change. As of today I am announcing that I have taken a position with the VCE team(vArmy) at EMC as a Senior vSpecialist. It was a decision that was exciting, terrifying, and complex all at the same time. I was already a huge fan of both Chuck Hollis and Chad Sakac. After meeting my local team and getting a taste of the vision and drive to change the way datacenters are designed for the better; it was an easy decision to make. All that really had to be done was figure out how I could muster the courage to leave my home (current employer) where I have spent over 50% of my career.

For those that don’t know me, I have been on the customer-side of things for my entire short career of six years. To move to the provider-side will bring a great number of challenges and opportunities; which for me is the number one reason I have decided to make this change. I am a bit dramatic and sappy at my core. And so I will sum up the real reasons behind the decision through my eyes and hopefully encourage you in some way to continue or regain the passion for what you do.

1.  Challenges Develop Passion

From the moment I got my first IT job I knew I what doing what I was meant to do. I enjoy it so much it is ridiculous. Whether I am working a major project or writing a small script, the minute I see it come to fruition I am as happy as a dog with two tails. For me overcoming challenges results in a strong Passion for technology and what it can do. And over the years I realized something; Passion is infectious. When you care about what you are doing either people around you will start to care also, or they will get the heck away from you.

For me, the secret to Passion in what you do, is never being satisfied with the just what you are doing. I have been surrounded by incredible people who have been more skilled that me in every facet. My reaction to this was simple, follow them around and figure out what makes them so awesome and learn how to do it yourself. Be positive, be a sponge, be part of the team. My Wife (who is awesome BTW) can tell stories about me starting a job, realizing that I didn’t know everything I needed to, and then spending 4-6 hours a night reading and studying till I was over-prepared. Those moments of realizing I am lacking start a fire in me to take things to the next level.

By taking this position I am intentionally moving myself from the top man on the totem pole to the lowest man on the rung. With great people like Chad Sakac, Scott Lowe, Stuart Miniman, John Avery, Ed Saipetch, Dave Graham, Chuck Hollis, Christopher Kusek and my incredible local team here in DFW; I am but a small speck in comparison. I will never reach my full potential until I knock myself down and surround myself with wiser and stronger people. For me, taking this position sets me up to really grow as a person and IT professional over the next phase of my career. Even better, this move will encourage my already strong Passion for virtualization and truly agile infrastructure.

2.  The World is Changing (or at least the stuff it runs on)

I saw this the moment 4+ years ago when I was first introduced into enterprise datacenter virtualization. It was edgy and a little difficult to grasp but, there was one core thing I came away with - this is going to change everything. I went on to successfully do so many things with virtualization using VMware technologies and defined myself as a professional. The funny thing is that this is still just the beginning. Virtualization of computing resources utilizing a robust hypervisor is just the first step. With the new partnerships like vBlocks and move towards abstraction of layers in storage, networking, and security, information technology is soon to change forever. Not everyone sees or believes that yet but enterprise architecture will be molded by these changes, mark my words. At my core I see this future and more than anything else I want to be a part of helping make that happen. EMC has invested a enormous amount of money and vision and are redefining themselves as a company to be a part of this change. This position is the perfect opportunity to become a part of something great.

3.  I Am The Warm Little Center

In my current position I make a huge impact. Across business or technology lines I play a major part in both decisions and accomplishments. My current employer has been incredible to me in so many ways. There have been tough times like: four different CIO’s in three years, losing close friends, and insane workloads. But, I feel nothing but love and gratitude to my current employer.

However, there is one problem I will not escape. At the end of the day I can’t make them one penny. I will never be a part of the profit center in a company that is a consumer lender. I readily admit jealously at seeing product owners or risk analysis folks who make direct contributions to the revenue and growth. While I am an important aspect of the company and make those warm little profit centers successful and on schedule; I am never going to be where I want to be.

This all changes for me at EMC. Not only will I be able to contribute to the revenue of such a great company; but they will have the tools, materials, and career advancement opportunities that I would never have access to otherwise. I get to become a part of a warm center and I would even venture that with this particular team, this is really the hot boiling center of things to come.

 

Fear & Atmosphere

Even with all these reasons this has been a very difficult choice. I feel at home at my current employer. I know so many amazing people that I have worked with there. My life both personally and professionally has been improved for the better by my experiences there. However, nothing lasts forever. To quote Ecclesiastes(3:1) “There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under heaven”. Sometimes when you are in that wonderful, comfortable, happy place (atmosphere) you can be afraid to leave (fear).

I know this decision is the best one for my family and myself. So I will leave my comfortable atmosphere and overcome my fear of change and go forward with all the energy and effort I can muster. I want nothing less than to change the future of information technology and I believe there is no company in a better position than EMC.

Along with all these reasoning one thing  is certain. I am a customer-focused person. I have lived life as the person trying to make the miraculous happen with little time or resources. Now I have the opportunity to partner with similar people and help make them successful. I now get the chance to change from the Warrior at the gate to the traveling Warrior Monk coming to turn the tide of battle.

So I will end this post with these questions for you:

What are you passionate about? What fears or atmospheres stand between you and that passion? Are you comfortable? Are you challenged? Inside you know you are capable of great things. Just search yourself and determine if you are heading towards them or waiting for them to head towards you.

Comments, questions, or critique are always welcome and really appreciated.

.nick

 

 

Retrospective Thanks (VMware, Dell, Cisco, EMC)

In my career I was a late starter and fast riser. It wasn’t too long ago I was plugging in monitors and crawling under desks (a job I still highly respect). I owe a lot of my success to my supportive Wife who while she was raising my children, let me spend hours reading complete histories of LAN switching or reference book on WAN protocols. Not to mention every RFC under the sun. I owe a lot to my aggressive nature of never losing a fight whether it was an annoying Outlook bug, or an 801.X config that wouldn’t work right. But I also owe a lot to the technologies that I invested my time and effort behind who ultimately made my career. I bet on certain companies and technologies and they came through for me time and again. And so in this short blog post, I want to say thanks. So here are my thanks to the top 4 companies that have made me valuable by staying valuable in the information technology arena.

1. VMware

My first experience with VMware was very early on from listening to a Dell solution architect talk about where they were going. This was back when vMotion was just a rumor and still seemed impossible. I went on to work for a company that did a big virtualization shoot-out. At the end of the shoot-out my recommendation was VMware. I was strongly impressed by their focus on stability and running at the enterprise level. Unfortunately, the company chose another virtualization product(I left shortly after). After I left they found out the hard way what an enterprise virtual product needs and within a year they switched to VMware after going through a very painful experience with the other product.
The next company needed me for specific skills but when problem arose with their *free* virtual development solution, I pitched an idea to convert everything to a VMware platform. I must have had to pitch it a hundred times and I even called one meeting with every development team in one big room to explain how VMware works. After selling it for months I finally got the funds and approval. It was a complete success and allowed me to move production infrastructure services like Exchange, LCS 2005, SQL servers, data warehousing, and file servers down the road. I was able to be the guy that got my company from 15% to 80% virtualized within three years. When we needed to be agile with environments or cheap(aka consolidated) with hardware purchases I had changed the culture to make this possible. But I owe my thanks to everyone at VMware for not only maintaining a stable product, but having incredible support, education services, aggressive improvement cycles, and strong community support. I would not be where I am now without the guys and gals at VMware doing what they do.

2. Dell

Whether it was their servers, switches, or workstations I have been involved in Dell shops since my first IT job. They have been consistent with their excellent documentation, strong support, and great product. My favorite part about Dell is their consistent commitment to integrating with major players like EMC and VMware. When it came down to solutions that needed to work with SAN and virtualization options I had, Dell had already put in the work to make sure they were the logical option. I have had a very difficult time not choosing Dell in datacenter projects that involved VMware. I recently made my first trip to a Dell Executive Briefing and left very impressed with their commitment to really providing value and not just selling a product. Dell for me is a company designed to be invested in the long-term benefits and not short-term margins.

3. Cisco

My first praise for Cisco is that their certification programs still really matter. In a world of paper certs the Cisco network programs are still are a great way to prove your worth and actually study for comprehension. I could go on about stable and feature rich routing and switching but the one place where Cisco really paid off for me was their ASA firewall line. I put my reputation on the line pushing to change my current employer’s firewall devices to Cisco solutions. The things I was able to do with multi-tier VPN, securing site-to-site tunnels, network segmentation, troubleshooting, and improving security blew all expectations out of the water. Shortly after I was able to implement unified wireless solutions that solidified Cisco as an integral part of our infrastructure. It is tough to be at the top and still provide consistent value over many different business lines. Cisco gets kudos for giving me tools to be productive.

4. EMC

While not the cheapest storage option at first glance EMC does bring one consistent thing to the table every time, you can bet your job on it. I have never met people from company where they passionately believe in their product like the EMC folks I have run into. And EMC is definitely in this list for the early adoption of VMware (in integration and corporate stock) which made it a de facto choice early on. Every time I have a design to build, I evaluate a product for what it can do for me.  And EMC consistently provides storage products that not only do what is needed but open up possibilities that you hadn’t thought of. Similar to Cisco this is a company that could very easily surf on market-share. But they are aggressive at staying on top and in turn has paid off for me.

So just to clarify, I am not paid by any of the above. I am just thanking these firms for making my investment in them pay me back. And I know that someone could argue that X firm could have done Y for me in the same place. But, in my particular case I have benefited greatly from four companies and just wanted to say thanks where no one else might have.

Who knows what tomorrow brings? Maybe VMware will start giving free licensing to Osama Bin Laden or EMC starts stealing candy from orphan babies in Calcutta. But at least right now these guys are on my list.

So thanks

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