october 25-28, 2004 jw marriott grande lakes resort orlando, florida snia roadmap project wayne...
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October 25-28, 2004 • JW Marriott Grande Lakes Resort • Orlando, Florida
SNIA Roadmap Project
Wayne Rickard
Chair, SNIA Technical Council & Roadmap Task Force
October 27, 2004
October 25-28, 2004 • JW Marriott Grande Lakes Resort • Orlando, Florida
• What is a Roadmap?• The SNIA Roadmap: Goals & Objectives• Schedule & Timeline • Roadmap Workshops
– Business Driver Themes– Tech Drivers– Synthesis
• Presenting the Data – Roadmap Trial Use Document
• Next Steps – how you can help
Agenda
October 25-28, 2004 • JW Marriott Grande Lakes Resort • Orlando, Florida
Roadmap Definition #1“A 'roadmap' is an extended look at the future of a chosen field of inquiry composed from the collective knowledge and imagination of the brightest drivers of change in that field.” Bob Galvin
October 25-28, 2004 • JW Marriott Grande Lakes Resort • Orlando, Florida
Roadmap Definition #2
“….a science and technology roadmap provides a consensus view or vision of the future S&T landscape available to decision makers. The roadmapping process provides a way to identify, evaluate, and select strategic alternatives that can be used to achieve a desired science and technology objective.” Bob Schaller
October 25-28, 2004 • JW Marriott Grande Lakes Resort • Orlando, Florida
timeBusiness / Market /Drivers / Objectives
Products / Services /Capabilities / Systems /
Opportunities / Risks
Technology /Competencies
Skills /partnerships /
resources, etc.
Layers connect:
Time(know-when)
‘purpose’(know-why)
‘delivery’(know-what)
‘resources’(know-how)
Trends drivers, key issues and uncertainties
Evolution of required and desirable functional performance of storage systems of the future
Required and desired technological response, including research requirements
Policy, infrastructure, partnerships, inward investment, etc.
What are we attempting to produce?
Roadmap Planning
October 25-28, 2004 • JW Marriott Grande Lakes Resort • Orlando, Florida
Roadmap Planning
Objectives
Architecture
Development
Analysis
Revision(future)
Validation(future)
October 25-28, 2004 • JW Marriott Grande Lakes Resort • Orlando, Florida
The SNIA Roadmap
Goals and Objectives
October 25-28, 2004 • JW Marriott Grande Lakes Resort • Orlando, Florida
Major Issues (Objectives) Total
Trusted authority on information related to storage*
210
Advance adoption of storage networks as complete and trusted solutions*
205
Identify and correct technology gaps 150
Guide technology transition from pre-commercial to pre-product state
135
Catalyze and accelerate rapid development of technologies relevant to advancing state-of-the-art
130
Tighten linkages in research 70
Workshop - Objectives Prioritization
October 25-28, 2004 • JW Marriott Grande Lakes Resort • Orlando, Florida
• Establish a Vision for the Storage industry• A focus for integrated strategic planning• Instill confidence in SNIA as preeminent industry group• Identify and guide opportunities for shared development• Clarify barriers and coordinate response within the
community• Can be applied in a wide range of business contexts• Improved communication across the industry (vertical &
horizontal)
Roadmap Goals
October 25-28, 2004 • JW Marriott Grande Lakes Resort • Orlando, Florida
SNIA Roadmap Core Team• The core team consists of the following individuals:
– Wayne Rickard, Seagate Technology– Mike Provance, Strateva– Ed Coyle, Purdue– Robert Peglar, XIOtech Corporation– Mark Bradley, Computer Associates– Michael Peterson, Peterson Associates– Mark Carlson, Sun Microsystems – Giora Tarnopolsky, Tarnotek/INSIC – David Dale, Network Appliance – Dave Thiel, Hewlett-Packard– Arnold Jones, Storage Networking Industry Ass.– Larry Krantz, EMC– Vincent Franceschini, Hitachi Data Systems– Rob Davis, qLogic– Ron Durbin – UCSD– Tony DiCenzo – SNIA Board
October 25-28, 2004 • JW Marriott Grande Lakes Resort • Orlando, Florida
Collaborators
Information Storage Industry ConsortiumInformation Storage Industry Consortium
October 25-28, 2004 • JW Marriott Grande Lakes Resort • Orlando, Florida
Release/Activity Vision/Purpose Delivery Date
Planning & BudgetTarget & Goals
Foundations of an SNIA Technical Roadmap – Vision & Structure
Feb 2004
Draft Roadmap & Requirements Workshop
Core Team SelectionModerated Brainstorming – La Jolla
April 29, 2004
Workshop 1 Core Team & Vertical User InterviewsBusiness Drivers - Boston
June 24-25,2004
Workshop 2 Core Team & Invited ExpertsTechnology Drivers - Monterey
July 22-23, 2004
Workshop 3 Synthesis Sept 14-15, 2004
Tech Element Relevance Align Tech Elements with Business Needs
Gather Additional Business/Vertical needs
Oct. 5, 2004
Trial Use Release Final Format – TC Review @ Fall SNW Extend to TWGs
Oct. 21, 2004
SNIA Roadmap – Progress to Date
October 25-28, 2004 • JW Marriott Grande Lakes Resort • Orlando, Florida
Release/Activity Vision/Purpose Delivery Date
Workshop 4 CoreTeam/TC Final Synthesis Consensus on needs, recommendations, messages
December 2004
Trial Use Review SNIA Member Review Extend to limited public review, e.g. EUC
Feb 2005
Workshop 5 Review and consider public review comments
March 2005
Final Release “Aligning Business and Technical Objectives for the Storage Industry”
April 2005
(w/Spring SNW)
SNIA Roadmap – Delivery Schedule
October 25-28, 2004 • JW Marriott Grande Lakes Resort • Orlando, Florida
Business Drivers
Business Drivers with Technical & Industry Relevance
October 25-28, 2004 • JW Marriott Grande Lakes Resort • Orlando, Florida
Example of Demand-Side Architecture
October 25-28, 2004 • JW Marriott Grande Lakes Resort • Orlando, Florida
Objectives (e.g. “Data Security Objectives”) align with business needs and are placed in time.
• An objective represent maturity points where the transition from “development” to “adoption” occurs.
• An objective is a measurable industry milestone, such as a first demonstration.
• More practically, an objective indicates mature products and solutions are available in the market.
• Objectives link directly to the technical elements they are dependent on. In other words, any technical milestone or innovation that is a dependency for achievement of this objective is shown.
Application Objectives & Business Process Categories
Objective
<Tech Dependency 3>
<Tech Dependency 1>
<Tech Dependency 2>
Need Alignment: Business Driver
October 25-28, 2004 • JW Marriott Grande Lakes Resort • Orlando, Florida
Explored 8 Business Drivers Themes
• Competitiveness & opportunity• Business & IT agility• Instantaneous, online business • Globalization of supply chain• Regulatory compliance and risk management • Data security • Mobile convergence• Digital Society
October 25-28, 2004 • JW Marriott Grande Lakes Resort • Orlando, Florida
Business Driver Needs ProgressionAcross all verticals, what environmental or market trends may be leveraged for competitive advantage through appropriate application of storage technology? In other words, when does adoption of appropriate storage technology become a differentiator in delivered value?
During Adoption, firms enjoy measurable benefit from their investments
During Introduction, both technical and business risk higher.
During Maturity, benefits are widely available and most firms have adopted, diluting unique value contribution
October 25-28, 2004 • JW Marriott Grande Lakes Resort • Orlando, Florida
Storage has matured in an environment where security has been a secondary concern. Now, new models for deploying storage expose systems to threats and attacks that put data at risk. Our industry must agree on requirements for storage network security, then create architectures, interfaces, and practices which make optimal use of existing security technologies in a storage network. Where nothing exists that meets the requirements for use in a storage network, we must create, or stimulate creation of, new information security technologies. Storage and Storage Networking security will be important for installations from the departmental level to the multi-enterprise. The security of the stored information in heterogeneous environments must also be addressed, as well as any security issues inherent in underlying transports or technologies. the cost and performance tradeoffs of deploying storage security must be weighed against the business risk of unprotected data. Finally, the industry must address best practices and preferred methods in anticipation of government-dictated security policies.
Sample Theme: “Data Security”
October 25-28, 2004 • JW Marriott Grande Lakes Resort • Orlando, Florida
The concept of the digital society has been growing over the last few years. With the advent of robust high speed communications, inexpensive storage, and inexpensive compute servers, applications for personal information processing and storage have begun to appear in the marketplace. The concept of the digital society promises to be one of the areas of explosive growth in coming years.
Access to personal information, documents, medical history, as well as digital content has the potential to become the fastest growing market segments for pervasive information storage, application processing requirements, high speed and wireless communications.
These market drivers will also drive requirements in access security, data assurance (DR, archival, and longevity).
New applications and information devices will be introduced into the home as well as convergence of personal information devices such as CellPhones, PDA’s, cameras…
Sample Theme: “Digital Society”
October 25-28, 2004 • JW Marriott Grande Lakes Resort • Orlando, Florida
Tech Drivers
Technology Research and Development Trends in Storage
October 25-28, 2004 • JW Marriott Grande Lakes Resort • Orlando, Florida
October 25-28, 2004 • JW Marriott Grande Lakes Resort • Orlando, Florida
Tech Element Relevancy Matrix• Review – are all listed Business Drivers,
requirements, and technical elements clearly defined?
• Assign Relevance – 5 = critical technology dependency – can’t
satisfy requirement without it– 4 = very important technology dependency
– inhibits mass adoption without it– 3 = important technology dependency –
enhances competitiveness– 2 = minor technology impact – trivial impact,
substitutes available– 1 = no impact – unrelated technology– 0 = use only if you don’t understand the
technology or the requirement
• Share with other Subject Matter Experts
October 25-28, 2004 • JW Marriott Grande Lakes Resort • Orlando, Florida
Synthesis & Presentation
Organizing and Presenting the Roadmap Data
October 25-28, 2004 • JW Marriott Grande Lakes Resort • Orlando, Florida
Contents:1. Executive summary2. Introduction, purpose, overview3. Conceptual themes: demand, change, innovation4. Business themes: single-page one theme perspectives,
based on business drivers5. Tech Drivers: The Tech roadmaps, with a hierarchy of
basic research and tech elements6. Trends: the data we believe and what we think it tells us.7. Verticals: The skew and relative priorities of the various
business drivers across several vertical segments. A vertical-specific refinement on the timing expressed in the theme section.
8. Basic Research: guidance, if SNIA, organizational leads & milestones, resource identification (i.e. TWGs)
9. Summary
High Level Roadmap Strawman
October 25-28, 2004 • JW Marriott Grande Lakes Resort • Orlando, Florida
Workshop - Initial Influence LayersRegulatorySecondary stakeholders
CustomersEnduser classesSystems integrators/VARs
Applications
ProgramsStrategic Plan
MembershipSystems manufacturersSoftwareBoard manufacturersComponent manufacturers
Applied TechnologyNetworkingPlatform
Emergent TechnologyFuture domain technologiesTechnology trends
EN
VIR
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EN
TBU
SIN
ESS
DR
IVER
OR
GA
NIZ
ATIO
NTEC
HN
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GY
DR
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Industryassociations
Governmentagencies
Simplicity
Vendor neutralityScalingarchitecture
Cost ofownership
Council roadmaps
Governmentlabs
Academia
Industry R&D
Requirements /Product & operations plans
Identify SNIA alliances & liaisons
Add data from additional customers/verticals to current data set
Roadmap will align with high-level SNIA goals
October 25-28, 2004 • JW Marriott Grande Lakes Resort • Orlando, Florida
Near-term (0-7) Mid-Term (7-15) Long-Term (15+)
2004“Good Enough”
Ex: SNIA Data Security Needs
Pervasive
Metadata SecurityNeed Transition: What drives this
new need? What are the
consequences of not transitioning?
October 25-28, 2004 • JW Marriott Grande Lakes Resort • Orlando, Florida
Theme described
Critical Timeline
Supportive Research
Key technical deliverables Technology maturity index?
Risk?Expected Payoff?
Progression of NeedsBusiness Requirements
A page from the Roadmap Document
Sample Report Visualization
October 25-28, 2004 • JW Marriott Grande Lakes Resort • Orlando, Florida
Decision Support Tools
October 25-28, 2004 • JW Marriott Grande Lakes Resort • Orlando, Florida
Example INEEL Component Roadmap – Hydrogen Generator Development
Concept Development Proof of Principle Proof of Performance Pilot Scale Experience
October 25-28, 2004 • JW Marriott Grande Lakes Resort • Orlando, Florida
December February MarchJanuary April
Add Vertical Perspectives
Additional Tech Drivers
Workshops
Draft Release
Complete Data SNIA Member Review
SNIA Review
Draft Trial Use Roadmap
Spring SNW
Core Team Review
Final
2004
Synthesis