Data Center Conversation with FieldView Solutions David Schirmacher on getting IT and Facilities together, galvanic corrosion metaphor

Over the past 9 months I have had many conversations with David Schirmacher, Chief Strategy Office of FieldView Solutions.

image

image 
David Schirmacher,
Chief Strategy Officer

David Schirmacher is Chief Strategy Officer for FieldView Solutions. He has close to 30 years of experience managing the design and operation of millions of square feet of mission critical facilities, representing billions of dollars in corporate investment.

Mr. Schirmacher was most recently Vice President and Global Head of Engineering and Critical Systems at Goldman Sachs & Company, where he was responsible for the design, operation and overall strategy of the firm's data centers, trading and critical business environments throughout the US, Europe and Asia. Previously, David served as Vice President, Director of Operations at Jones Lang LaSalle, and Compass.

David is on the technical advisory committee of Mission Critical Magazine, VP of 7x24 Exchange International and a member of a task force organized by the EPA and other industry influencers to develop an agreed method for measuring and reporting data center infrastructure efficiency.

Dave and I were chatting at Uptime, and he made the point in jest I hadn't written a blog post about him yet.  I have been meaning to write about David and FieldView Solutions, but actually have a writer's block posting as I know so much and I don't know where to start.  My first conversation with David was a two hour phone call, and we rarely chat for less than an hour as we bounce around many different topics.

An example of areas we will discuss is what is going on in the industry, who is doing interesting work and who isn't, what did we think of a conference.  David and I have run into each at DatacenterDynamics, AFCOM's Data Center World, Gartner Data Center Conference, Uptime Institute Symposium, and The Green Grid over the last 6 months.  We'll see each other next when I make my first trip to 7x24 Exchange Orlando.

image

To break the writer's block I gave David a call and discussed some ideas and one topic we discussed is the recommendation that comes from a variety of people that the data center electricity bill should be moved out of facilities and into IT, so IT has an incentive to save electricity. 

David and I discussed the fallacy of this recommendation fixing the energy efficient IT problem.  Getting facilities and IT to work together is brought up often, but getting the two groups to work together is not easy, and many times does not last as the connection and communications disintegrate after the initial discussions.

Then we hit upon the metaphor of a galvanic corrosion where two metals (IT and facilities) are in contact and one corrodes as electrons flow between the materials.

An infamous example of galvanic corrosion is the Statue of Liberty's copper skin and iron supports.

image

The galvanic reaction between iron and copper was originally mitigated by insulating copper from the iron framework using an asbestos cloth soaked in shellac. However, the integrity and sealing property of this improvised insulator broke down over the many years of exposure to high levels of humidity normal in a marine environment. The insulating barrier became a sponge that kept the salted water present as a conductive electrolyte, forming a crude electrochemical cell as and Volta had discovered a century earlier. The formation of expanded material that followed was typical of confined situations found in crevice corrosion.

When two metals are far apart on the Galvanic series, your corrosion problem gets worse.  The same idea applies to IT and facilities, the further apart the groups the unintended consequences (the corrosion) risk is higher.  You can mitigate the risks, but you should be aware of the differences up front.

Here are a few words of wisdom from David Schirmacher.

although it is difficult to create a lasting connection between the two groups, in essentially every case, you will find that the best practice operations have succeeded at doing it.

if you don’t have the right stakeholders accountable for performance you run a big risk of only appearing to be proactive.

Data Center Analytics supports better decision making, Power Assure ships new capabilities

Power Assure has a press release on their new analytics capabilities. 

Energy Management version 4 (EM/4) software enables actionable-intelligence for maximizing data center efficiency

Santa Clara, Calif. – May 9, 2011 - Power Assure®, Inc., a data center infrastructure management solutions provider, today introduced at Uptime Institute’s Symposium 2011 Data Center Analytics for its Energy Management software platform, version 4 (EM/4). Data Center Analytics gives data center operators for the first time the ability to analyze and synthesize the overwhelming amount of raw data now available on data center equipment performance and turn it into useful business information to improve the efficiency, capacity and performance of their data centers.

The Analytics capability exists side-by-side with the monitoring and automation modules.

image

Here is a sample dashboard from Power Assure to visualize data center systems.

image

Woohoo, GreenM3 makes GreenMonk's list of top 10 data center blogs

I honestly have fun writing on GreenM3, but sometimes I wonder why and what I should write on.  Today I was going to take a break to spend a family day with the kids and grandma, but I got up at 6am with a bunch of ideas, one of which is data center automation, and the kids are still asleep.

Checking Twitter this morning I saw this tweet.

image

I went to Tom Raftery's GreenMonk post on Top 10 Green Data Centers.

So without further ado – and in no particular order, I present you with my Top 10 Data Center blogs:

What great data center blogs have I missed?

Read more: http://greenmonk.net/top-10-data-center-blogs/#ixzz1IwQjWWv3

Thanks Tom for putting together this list.

And, thank you for continuing to visit Green (Low Carbon) Data Center Blog.

Four Potential Ways Lee Technologies + Schneider Electric are better together

I had a chance to talk to

Rob McKernan, President, Americas, Schneider Electric IT Business
John Lee, CEO and Chairman, Lee Technologies
Bob Woolley, Senior Vice President, Critical Environment Services, Lee Technologies

about the press release Schneider Electric released on the acquisition of Lee Technologies. 

image

image

The first thing we covered is the introductions.  I've had the pleasure of having lengthy conversations with John Lee and Bob Woolley.  Rob McKernan and  I had not met and one of the first things we started discussing is my custom house project and my new Woodstone pizza oven.  My oven is the Chuckanut 4' diameter, 2,500 lbs, 115,000 btu.

image

Where the first thing I was cooked was a roast chicken.

image

Some things can be done much better when you get the right technology with a good process. For fun I like to cook (process), and my pizza oven is my new tool.

Lee Technologies has been able to upgrade its data center capabilities now that it has access to the tools Schneider Electric brings.  And, Schneider Electric has picked up a bunch of skilled data center chefs who know how to operate data centers.  What are the potential results?

  1. Top of the list is reducing the energy used in data centers.  As the Google guys have shared the initial commissioning starts the process to optimize the performance and as load is accumulated, the process continues to improve energy efficiency.  Reducing energy beyond the simple things of hot/cold aisle containment, requires more resources and sharing information across teams.  Schneider Electric and Lee Technologies are one example of a team who can support more complex energy saving projects.
  2. Products with processes. Processes aligned with products.  Lee Technologies has the operations process expertise.  Schneider Electric has the products.  As one data center executive shared with me, you can talk about any of the products I have in the data center, but you can't talk about how we integrate the products.  The integration is our intellectual property and how we are better than most.
  3. Condition Based Management (CBM) is becoming a standard in some industries, but is rarely discussed in data centers.  Taking the maintenance information (Lee Tech) and creating a feedback loop to products (Schneider Electric) is part of a CBM solution.
    1. It is Department of Defense policy that condition-based maintenance (CBM) be "implemented to improve maintenance agility and responsiveness, increase operational availability, and reduce life cycle total ownership costs"
  4. Take all these ideas and expand into emerging markets - South America, APAC, Africa, and Middle East.

BTW, John Lee is on my list of visitors to see my new pizza oven.  It's great when we can talk food, wine, and data centers.  And, best of all be at home.

A 10X increase in GreenM3 traffic increases latency, what was hitting my site?

Last night I wrote about Amazon.com’s Cloud Drive, and noticed a 10X increase in traffic.

image

Which was actually unrelated to the post as a dump of the traffic shows a bunch of repeated URLs hitting only the home page.

image

Latency spiked, but the site stayed up.  The following is from Pingdom monitoring www.greenm3.com.

image

Curious I am going to contact SquareSpace support to see if they were showing any other activity like this to their site.

The quick response from SquareSpace gave me the answer in 3 minutes.  Very cool.

This is a form of spam. Robots attempt to add comments on pages with forms in hopes that your website posts comments without moderation. They're not actually trying to hack into your account -- they're seeing the form and trying to leave a reciprocal link for the site they're promoting.
We've been trying to block these, but occasionally they slip through. No need to block the IP -- the fact that they hit the site so many times will alert our spam filters.
Sorry for the troubles.