‘Tis the Season – for Events and Trade Shows
Make sure to visit the Cisco booth and talk to the team about Cisco UCS Servers
Well, we are officially deep into the IT and Data Center event and trade show season.
This is a great time for Cisco and a tremendous opportunity for us to meet and talk with IT professionals about what is important to them. The discussions range from deployment challenges, to management, networking, collaboration and even failover and Recovery Time Objectives (RTO). It is very rewarding when new customers stop by to say how great Cisco UCS is, how easy it was to integrate into their data center, and how they are using Cisco solutions (including Cisco UCS) to deliver superior performance for their organizations. The most fun is when they tell me what server(s) there were using and then evangelize to me the benefits of UCS, wishing they hadn’t waited so long to make the move up to Cisco servers and the Cisco Unified Computing System (UCS).
One of the most compelling conversations I have ever had was at VMworld. A visitor to the Cisco booth (from a major mid-west university) came by to praise UCS and to ask some technical questions. The most important question for him was the need to verify the correct NIC failover settings for his VMware environment. {Cisco UCS Manager lets you programmatically specify how failover is handled, either at the individual Service Profile level or at the Service Profile Template level, depending on your setup.} The customer did not remember what his current settings were and did not have his VPN information with him, but he still needed help. While he was calling his team to get the access information he needed, I called over one the Technical Matter Experts staffing our booth. From the event floor, we actually logged into the university’s UCS deployment, inside the data center (view only mode of course), accessed UCS Manager and drilled down into the Service Profile Template for the VMware servers. The end of the story is that the UCS B-Series server NIC failover settings were optimized for his VMware deployment, which in this case was to let VMware handle it. UCS adapter policies were set to “VMware”. Even better was the ability that Cisco UCS delivers which enables this degree of visibility and management. I can tell you it impressed a number of folks that were watching the process and had multiple questions afterward. {For step by step guidance to set the UCS Service Profile and Templates policies discussed above, see Cisco Virtualization Solution for EMC VSPEX with VMware vSphere 5.1 for 250 Virtual Machines. Figures 71 through 76 are great illustrations of this capability. They are located in the section titled: VSPEX Configuration Guidelines – Physical setup – Create Service Profile Template}
The “hands on” story above was a one-time experience for me. The truly amazing thing is that it is an absolutely normal occurrence to be talking with someone about Cisco Unified Computing System, and have an existing customer, who is just walking by, join the conversation. When this happens it typically kicks off a 10 minute “customer and visitor” discussion. The UCS customer goes into detail about how much they like UCS and the Cisco partnership, the benefits they are getting from their UCS Solution, and how much better it is than their old (always named) vendor. This is not an unusual occurrence, and the depth of customer appreciation for the UCS solution is amazing.
The most prevalent reason to switch (but not the only one) I have been hearing from customers who have adopted UCS could be best summarized this way: Cisco UCS is Cisco Unified Computing System. UCS truly does deliver a solution that unifies data center computing. The key ingredient, the thing that everyone “digs the most” (1960’s flashback), is management – try out the UCS Manager Test Drive. Cisco UCS abstracts the server identity (over 120+ configuration parameters) to reside in UCS Manager, so that any like UCS server can easily be designated the host for that specific server identity – and with UCS it could be a Rack or Blade server. Not only that, you can use a pre-defined Service Profile and duplicate it to generate a UCS Service Profile Template for broader use. See this excellent blog by my colleague Ranjit Nayak for a brief intro to UCS Service Profiles – Cisco UCS – Quintessential Fabric-based computing Part 2. Using UCS Service Profiles drive rapid deployment and potentially more important, screaming fast recovery time objectives (RTO) so data centers stay up and running with the best possible SLA. It all happens inside a single redundant management tool that enables collaboration and that can span data centers and geographies (Cisco UCS Central) with a lower Total Cost of Ownership.
It is hard for me to leave UCS TCO out of any blog or conversation. So here you go. Below is a very short video from EMC World 2012 booth. It is very relevant to UCS Manager and the IT economic environment, both then and now.
We hope to see you at the next event and definitely encourage you to come to Cisco Live.
If you have already been to one (or more) shows and stopped by the Cisco booth, that is fantastic and thanks for your support.
- If you have upcoming trips on your calendar don’t forgot to stop and see the innovations Cisco is delivering for your IT organization and meet with one of the multiple experts we have staffing the booth. To mention just a few, Cisco is driving significant innovation in: networking, management, servers (of course) and solutions based designs. Something for everyone.
- If you are still working on your schedule and are not sure which event will fit, take a look at our Cisco Global Events Calendar. There are still multiple shows and events going on worldwide. Cisco Live, US (late June in Orlando FL) is an incredible opportunity and is always a fantastic event.
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