Sun Microsystems will
officially unveil its $1 per CPU hour grid later this week, the company's
president Jonathan Schwartz has
announced on his
blog.
But the service will initially be limited to the US and is expected to hold
less capacity than promised.
Sun officially unveiled its grid in February last year
designed to provide enterprises with access to computing power in a similar way
to electricity.
The offering targeted compute intensive tasks such as rendering animations or
running a financial model or analysis.
Sun later delayed the roll out, claiming that large
clients were soaking up all the capacity. This left no space for the so-called
'retail' offering, where anybody would be able to purchase computing power at $1
per CPU hour from a special website.
Gordon Haff, an industry analyst at
Illuminata, told
vnunet.com at the time that
Sun needed additional time to sort out security issues, such as preventing it
from being used to send spam or launch denial of service attacks.
Schwartz blamed the delay on the reluctance of enterprises to put their trust
in grid systems. Instead they preferred the traditional outsourcing model where
a provider comes in and takes over the management and maintenance of a data
centre.
"But that would be like an electricity company collecting generators and
unique power requirements, and trying to build a grid out of them," he quipped.
Schwartz also acknowledged that building the Sun grid proved to be more
complex than initially thought.
Most of today's grids are built for specific applications such as data
analysis, powering online search engines or video rendering, but Sun's general
purpose grid required a different approach.
A security audit raised a number of problems that required repairing, and the
US government wanted to make sure that the service would adhere to export
controls that keep certain technologies out of the reach of "rogue nations".
The export controls will initially limit the grid to the US, but Schwartz
promised that Sun still plans to make the service available globally.
Applicants registering for an account will be screened before they are
granted access.
Once the service is live, users will be able to sign up and access their
accounts through the
network.com website.
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