On Thu, Jan 15, 2009 at 04:26:00PM -0500, Lechner, David A. wrote: > > Hello Again to all you Beowulf users! > Similar to Doug Edline's poll.... > > I was a subscriber in the late 1990s, but had to sign off the list for > several years as my job changed. > I used to follow many of your posts with such interest, and hope you > oldtimers (and newer subscribers as well) are all doing well !! > > I'm working on a study on computer system recapitalization and thought this > might make an excellent topic to engage on the Beowulf list. > We expect the results to have broad implications for US Federal Government IT > planning as well. > > I am researching the optimal life expectancy for a military program to plan > for
The rules may differ from the public to the private sector. In the public sector there is an issue with write down for tax purposes that comes to play. These schedules are set by various tax rules and decisions often made at purchase time. Once written down to zero it can make sense to invest in more hardware. If you must operate with a five year tax write down then you are effectively paying for the hardware over a five year life and an upgrade three years later become much more expensive than it would if a three year schedule was established at the onset (and accepted by the tax man). A federal contractor may have to factor in both public and private aspects. In all cases there is a 'growth' need. i.e. the demand for the cluster resources will likely increase. A computer room, with fixed air conditioning and AC power is much harder to upgrade than the machines in the room. i.e. It is hard to write down a building in three years to justify an expansion. This alone can justify a computer hardware refresh in the same space. Some military programs have very long contractual obligations that involve qualification and acceptance cycles. These obligations can dominate any schedule so read or write this fine print with care. It should be possible to mine the history of the top 500 computer system hardware to draw some graphs that will establish key expectations. Moore's law comes to play. Warranty is key.. fast disks tend to have a 3 year warranty. Same for CPUs motherboards and other stuff. In my limited experience the warranty is set by product factory and market life not so much by operating life time. When hardware comes out of warranty any analysis must 'spike' service and repair costs at the end of warranty. An end user might purchase hardware with a five year purchase cycle. A developer organization that needs to stay current and Moore's law is often able to justify a yearly 50% hardware refresh cycle. But "computer system recapitalization" is a financial phrase/ decision and has financial accounting rules at its core i.e. financial and legal not computational science. Some grant money limits and bounds the life of hardware, some releases it at the end of the grant to a 'pool'. In terms of hardware, a cluster purchased today will do tomorrow what it does today. Thus some attention must be made to changes in care, feeding, problem sets, competition, data sets and algorithms over time. A company that has double the transactions and inventory after two years of growth may need four (N=?) times the computation resource because the algorithms to process future data sets are non linear. A contractor would do well to have a staged hardware plan such that development is done on hardware as current as you can get followed by deployment, operation and refresh on much more slower and deliberate schedules. The agency may set a number of constraints that have consequences. One example is the FAA computer system upgrade plans. By the time hardware is qualified it is all but impossible to purchase and deploy. The problems with the FAA air traffic control system problems are well documented as are some of the homeland security computer system programs.... In the next couple of years I also expect to see Green clauses in federal contracts and laws that mandate or reward the replacement of hardware when a sufficiently green alternative is available and deployed. Yet another constraint... that may constipate things even more. -- T o m M i t c h e l l Found me a new hat, now what? _______________________________________________ Beowulf mailing list, Beowulf@beowulf.org To change your subscription (digest mode or unsubscribe) visit http://www.beowulf.org/mailman/listinfo/beowulf