HPC in the Cloud

Dedicated to Covering Enterprise & Scientific Large Scale Cloud Computing

 
HPC in the Cloud >> Blogs

Blog: Behind the Cloud

Behind the Cloud | Main Blog Index

Roadmap Chat with Univa’s New CEO, Gary Tyreman


On Tuesday, cloud management software vendor Univa UD announced that it placed one of its veteran product managers into the CEO slot to take the reigns as the company transitions from its grid roots into the cloud. Univa has been around for close to a decade and has maintained a focus on HPC in addition to enterprise datacenters and most recently, the cloud. After all, for grid-rooted company to survive these days, inserting a suite of cloud offerings is a foregone conclusion.

Like other players post-grid, Univa is differentiating itself by tuning its approach to be as broad as possible to work with private, public and hybrid clouds and to attempt to unravel some of the inherent complexity of making such IT shifts. It is hard to ignore that its new CEO came directly from five years at Platform Computing, which certainly will make things interesting as we see how the small company works to pick up pieces left over if and when Platform customers decide to take their business elsewhere.

One of the more interesting aspects of direct relevance to some of you is that Tyreman is focused on making HPC accessible to first-time users, something that is not often addressed in articles or even by vendors themselves. Tyreman was, according to Univa, “among the first in the industry to recognize the emerging entry-level user in the HPC space and was responsible for developing a vision for how to simplify running applications off the shelf; a key to unlocking value among organizations new to HPC.” With data mounting and applications increasing in scope and complexity, it might be this focus—if Tyreman runs with it—that will allow Univa to get a leg up on the competition by emphasizing the ease of use the company touts.

Prior to our interview, new Univa CEO, Gary Tyreman indicated that the shift in leadership was part of a natural transition that set the company on a trajectory that expanded to the ends of their grid roots into the new (but not dissimilar) paradigm of cloud computing. During our interview he laid out Univa’s roadmap and gave hints at new directions the company will be taking.

HPCc: Before coming to Univa you were at Platform--what was your role there and how did it morph into your position at Univa--what carryover and value did you bring from previous roles there? This might be answered in the context of your shift from Platform to offering migration from Platform LSF to the open source Sun Grid Engine-driven UniCluster Express.

Tyreman: While it’s true that I was with Platform Computing for five years, the reality is that the value I derived from that time was the ability to exercise all of my previous years’ product and business planning experience.

One key take-away was seeing how disruptive a company or technology can be to an industry and its incumbents. The impact can be rapid and transformative. The learning was special and is something that I will remember for a long time. It was Andy Grove that suggested, “only the paranoid survive”. At Univa we practice paranoia and believe that each and every customer has a choice and can vote with their feet if we don’t evolve, innovate and add value to their business.
 

HPCc: Can you give us a glimpse into Univa's roadmap as it stood two years ago when you first came to the company (I believe you started in 2008) and comment on how it developed prior to your new appointment?

Tyreman: When I joined Univa in 2008 the goal was essentially laid out. Transition the company from its roots in grid computing to a leading player in cloud systems management. Our first step was to establish a world-class product management function that would swiftly receive market feedback, translate it into patterns and map that directly into our roadmap. To make this happen we hired masters in the space for key product and engineering functions. The genius, as it were, was to unleash the team’s creativity and give them ownership of the product, from end-to-end.

The roadmap has evolved over the past two years in a very deliberate way. We managed the timing of the product sequencing through strategic relationships that had us working directly with Sun Microsystems, Oracle Corporation and Broadcom. Building the product by working directly with an end user – hand to mouth – was vital, while designing to the correct level of abstraction was key to ensure a market-ready product and not a one-off.

The result is a company, product and ecosystem that is not only disruptive but is highly desirable, differentiated and impossible to replicate.

HPCc: What areas did you see as the most challenging in the roadmap or trajectory the company was on and how will you address these issues in your new leadership role?

Tyreman: Our greatest assets can also be our greatest challenges. We are dynamic and fast moving. We are also small, which while this enables our nimbleness, it also sets the boundaries we must overcome. Our plan is to focus our efforts and this will likely become a new source of challenges. Scaling the business is a delicate balance of timing – not too soon, not too late. A good problem to have, nonetheless.

HPCc: Your niche positions in particular industries, including EDA, for example, have been helpful in allowing you to target a specific customer base but to grow further, what other areas are of most interest given your current offerings?

Tyreman: Our coming of age is definitely associated with our success in partnering with Broadcom to develop the largest virtualization-enabled private design cloud. We already see repeatability in other markets where we have operated for longer periods of time, including Life Sciences and Oil & Gas.

Moving beyond these two markets Univa will adopt pathfinders in new industries such as Digital Media. We already partner closely with Service Providers such as Rackspace and Switch, where we help enable hybrid clouds and simplify the on-boarding process of enterprises.

What is your personal vision statement for Univa as it stands following your appointment?

The most difficult lesson a person or business can learn is how to embrace and manage change. Change offers opportunity, depending on how one reacts to it. Cloud computing and virtualization are transformative and represent substantial change.
It is our view that the next generation data center is being transformed by cloud computing to the extent that the term “premise” is becoming relative. Where the application runs will become relative, and therefore how one provisions compute, network and storage will have to change. Univa’s position is to manage the seamless migration of workload from within the enterprise to any cloud and back again.
 

Posted by Nicole Hemsoth - July 8 @ 11:25AM, Eastern Daylight Time

(Digg, Technorati, more)

Discussion

There are 1 discussion items posted.  

Fresh air at Univa
Submitted by miha123 on 07/12/2010 - 10:01PM


Gary Tyreman as CEO of Univa is a bout of fresh air. He comes from a tight group of industry hands-on grid and cloud computing work to make the technology mainstream a real business.

Miha A.
Ahrono Associates

Post #1

Nicole Hemsoth

Nicole Hemsoth

Nicole Hemsoth is the managing editor of HPC in the Cloud and will discuss a range of overarching issues related to HPC-specific cloud topics in posts, which will appear several times per week in Behind the Cloud. 

More Nicole Hemsoth



Recent Comments

Feature Articles

On Par for 2 Billion: 3PAR Discusses Cloud Strategy

Storage vendor 3PAR has been at the heart of an intense bidding war between HP and Dell due to its unique refinements and developments in virtualized storage platform concepts. Thin provisioning and a focus on the needs of large-scale enterprises and cloud providers have catapulted the company into the public eye but as 3PAR's Craig Nunes discusses with HPC in the Cloud, the cloud strategy has been consistent since 1999--even if the world is just taking notice now.
Read More...

Busting the "Cloud in a Box" Myth

The concept of private clouds is gaining traction and due to the buzz, more enterprises are taking a much closer look at the possibility—if they haven’t taken steps to virtualize some or all of their infrastructure already. For those who have not yet made the transition, a lack of understanding of the complex process behind private cloud implementation is at the core of hesitancy, therefore vendors are looking for ways to convince users to fear not, the private cloud is not only within reach—but simple to step into.
Read More...

Achieving Ultra High Performance in the Cloud

Companies in competitive domains, such as financial services, create large data repositories containing significant amounts of data collected from daily operations. Using supercomputers to analyze these massive datasets might yield the highest level of performance, but this is prohibitively expensive. Using proprietary, custom-built HPC atop cloud environments is also a viable option--although one that does come with a series of drawbacks that must be mitigated to achieve critical performance levels.
Read More...

Around the Web

Application Flexibility and the New Enterprise Architecture

Aug 31 | Application delivery strategies must be shaped with flexibility in mind as the number of platforms delivering core applications is bound to change with time. Since a greater number of devices and platforms are entering the infrastructure mix, those who do not adapt quickly face being locked into strategies that do not mesh well with new developments. Read more...

A Maturation Stage for Storage Virtualization

Aug 27 | Storage virtualization has been gaining momentum as it moves from concept to practice but some suggest the offerings in this realm have not matured sufficiently and require a longer maturation process before wider adoption occurs. Read more...

HP Seeks to Boost Cloud Service Automation Capability

Aug 27 | Although it was lost in the chaos of the 3PAR bidding war between, HP announced news that it acquired cloud service automation firm Stratavia to bolster its cloud management offering and further its strategy in the arena. Read more...

NASA CIO Weighs in on Nebula, Public Clouds

Aug 26 | In an interview from the NASA IT Summit last week, the agency's CIO, Linda Cureton weighs in on developments with Nebula platform and the adoption of the open source code by other agencies looking to the cloud. Read more...

Facing the Realities of Private Cloud Building

Aug 24 | While private clouds are getting far more attention than they received at the beginning of the cloud buzz boom, the realities of the complexities of actual building them--not to mention the financial and time investments--are often overlooked. Read more...

Featured Whitepapers

Increase IT Performance from the Enterprise to the Cloud with WAN Optimization

Aug 30 | | Enterprises face a paradox today: while workers become increasingly distributed, IT infrastructure is rapidly consolidating. Virtualization has made it possible to create consolidated, elastic pools.

Grid Computing in the Cloud White Paper

May 14 | | Empower business users, scientists and researchers with their own grid computing infrastructure in the cloud.

Multimedia

Webcast: Storm Clouds - Security Issues in the Cloud and How to Address Them

This Webinar will highlight the four critical areas of concern when securing cloud infrastructure services and managed enterprise applications.

Webcast: Confronting HPC Cloud Computing Security Concerns

Escalating energy and operational costs of building and maintaining data centers are forcing enterprises to adopt cloud computing models. But are Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) solutions like IBM's Computing on Demand (CoD) really cost effective? Join the discussion as industry experts discuss how you can exploit cloud computing for maximum ROI.

Blogs by Topics

Blogs by Author

Cloud Blogroll



Featured Events

Cloud Expo Live
High Performance Computing Financial Markets
2010 Cloud Computing Conference
Cloud Summit
SC10
  • November 13-19, 2010
    SC10
    New Orleans , LA
    USA

Tabor Communications