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Maurizio Davini, University of Pisa and Thierry Pellegrino, Dell Technologies | VMworld 2020


 

>> From around the globe, it's theCUBE, with digital coverage of VMworld 2020, brought to you by the VMworld and its ecosystem partners. >> I'm Stu Miniman, and welcome back to theCUBES coverage of VMworld 2020, our 11th year doing this show, of course, the global virtual event. And what do we love talking about on theCUBE? We love talking to customers. It is a user conference, of course, so really happy to welcome to the program. From the University of Pisa, the Chief Technology Officer Maurizio Davini and joining him is Thierry Pellegrini, one of our theCUBE alumni. He's the vice president of worldwide, I'm sorry, Workload Solutions and HPC with Dell Technologies. Thierry, thank you so much for joining us. >> Thanks too. >> Thanks to you. >> Alright, so let, let's start. The University of Pisa, obviously, you know, everyone knows Pisa, one of the, you know, famous city iconic out there. I know, you know, we all know things in Europe are a little bit longer when you talk about, you know, some of the venerable institutions here in the United States, yeah. It's a, you know, it's a couple of hundred years, you know, how they're using technology and everything. I have to imagine the University of Pisa has a long storied history. So just, if you could start before we dig into all the tech, give us our audience a little bit, you know, if they were looking up on Wikipedia, what's the history of the university? >> So University of Pisa is one of the oldest in the world because there has been founded in 1343 by a pope. We were authorized to do a university teaching by a pope during the latest Middle Ages. So it's really one of the, is not the oldest of course, but the one of the oldest in the world. It has a long history, but as never stopped innovating. So anything in Pisa has always been good for innovating. So either for the teaching or now for the technology applied to a remote teaching or a calculation or scientific computing, So never stop innovating, never try to leverage new technologies and new kind of approach to science and teaching. >> You know, one of your historical teachers Galileo, you know, taught at the university. So, you know, phenomenal history help us understand, you know, you're the CTO there. What does that encompass? How, you know, how many students, you know, are there certain areas of research that are done today before we kind of get into the, you know, the specific use case today? >> So consider that the University of Pisa is a campus in the sense that the university faculties are spread all over the town. Medieval like Pisa poses a lot of problems from the infrastructural point of view. So, we have bought a lot in the past to try to adapt the Medieval town to the latest technologies advancement. Now, we have 50,000 students and consider that Pisa is a general partners university. So, we cover science, like we cover letters in engineering, medicine, and so on. So, during the, the latest 20 years, the university has done a lot of effort to build an infrastructure that was able to develop and deploy the latest technologies for the students. So for example, we have a private fiber network covering all the town, 65 kilometers of a dark fiber that belongs to the university, four data centers, one big and three little center connected today at 200 gigabit ethernet. We have a big data center, big for an Italian University, of course, and not Poland and U.S. university, where is, but also hold infrastructure for the enterprise services and the scientific computing. >> Yep, Maurizio, it's great that you've had that technology foundation. I have to imagine the global pandemic COVID-19 had an impact. What's it been? You know, how's the university dealing with things like work from home and then, you know, Thierry would love your commentary too. >> You know, we, of course we were not ready. So we were eaten by the pandemic and we have to adapt our service software to transform from imperson to remote services. So we did a lot of work, but we are able, thanks to the technology that we have chosen to serve almost a 100% of our curriculum studies program. We did a lot of work in the past to move to virtualization, to enable our users to work for remote, either for a workstation or DC or remote laboratories or remote calculation. So virtualization has designed in the past our services. And of course when we were eaten by the pandemic, we were almost ready to transform our service from in person to remote. >> Yeah, I think it's, it's true, like Maurizio said, nobody really was preparing for this pandemic. And even for, for Dell Technologies, it was an interesting transition. And as you can probably realize a lot of the way that we connect with customers is in person. And we've had to transition over to modes or digitally connecting with customers. We've also spent a lot of our energy trying to help the community HPC and AI community fight the COVID pandemic. We've made some of our own clusters that we use in our HPC and AI innovation center here in Austin available to genomic research or other companies that are fighting the the virus. And it's been an interesting transition. I can't believe that it's already been over six months now, but we've found a new normal. >> Detailed, let's get in specifically to how you're partnering with Dell. You've got a strong background in the HPC space, working with supercomputers. What is it that you're turning to Dell in their ecosystem to help the university with? >> So we are, we have a long history in HPC. Of course, like you can imagine not to the biggest HPC like is done in the U.S. so in the biggest supercomputer center in Europe. We have several system for doing HPC. Traditionally, HPC that are based on a Dell Technologies offer. We typically host all kind of technology's best, but now it's available, of course not in a big scale but in a small, medium scale that we are offering to our researcher, student. We have a strong relationship with Dell Technologies developing together solution to leverage the latest technologies, to the scientific computing, and this has a lot during the research that has been done during this pandemic. >> Yeah, and it's true. I mean, Maurizio is humble, but every time we have new technologies that are to be evaluated, of course we spend time evaluating in our labs, but we make it a point to share that technology with Maurizio and the team at the University of Pisa, That's how we find some of the better usage models for customers, help tuning some configurations, whether it's on the processor side, the GPU side, the storage and the interconnect. And then the topic of today, of course, with our partners at VMware, we've had some really great advancements Maurizio and the team are what we call a center of excellence. We have a few of them across the world where we have a unique relationship sharing technology and collaborating on advancement. And recently Maurizio and the team have even become one of the VMware certified centers. So it's a great marriage for this new world where virtual is becoming the norm. >> But well, Thierry, you and I had a conversation to talk earlier in the year when VMware was really geering their full kind of GPU suite and, you know, big topic in the keynote, you know, Jensen, the CEO of Nvidia was up on stage. VMware was talking a lot about AI solutions and how this is going to help. So help us bring us in you work with a lot of the customers theory. What is it that this enables for them and how to, you know, Dell and VMware bring, bring those solutions to bear? >> Yes, absolutely. It's one statistic I'll start with. Can you believe that only on average, 15 to 20% of GPU are fully utilized? So, when you think about the amount of technology that's are at our fingertips and especially in a world today where we need that technology to advance research and scientistic discoveries. Wouldn't it be fantastic to utilize those GPU's to the best of our ability? And it's not just GPU's , I think the industry has in the IT world, leverage virtualization to get to the maximum recycles for CPU's and storage and networking. Now you're bringing the GPU in the fold and you have a perfect utilization and also flexibility across all those resources. So what we've seen is that convergence between the IT world that was highly virtualized, and then this highly optimized world of HPC and AI because of the resources out there and researchers, but also data scientists and company want to be able to run their day to day activities on that infrastructure. But then when they have a big surge need for research or a data science use that same environment and then seamlessly move things around workload wise. >> Yeah, okay I do believe your stat. You know, the joke we always have is, you know, anybody from a networking background, there's no such thing as eliminating a bottleneck, you just move it. And if you talk about utilization, we've been playing the shell game for my entire career of, let's try to optimize one thing and then, oh, there's something else that we're not doing. So,you know, so important. Retail, I want to hear from your standpoint, you know, virtualization and HPC, you know, AI type of uses there. What value does this bring to you and, you know, and key learnings you've had in your organization? >> So, we as a university are a big users of the VMware technologies starting from the traditional enterprise workload and VPI. We started from there in the sense that we have an installation quite significant. But also almost all the services that the university gives to our internal users, either personnel or staff or students. At a certain point that we decided to try to understand the, if a VMware virtualization would be good also for scientific computing. Why? Because at the end of the day, their request that we have from our internal users is flexibility. Flexibility in the sense of be fast in deploying, be fast to reconfiguring, try to have the latest beats on the software side, especially on the AI research. At the end of the day we designed a VMware solution like you, I can say like a whiteboard. We have a whiteboard, and we are able to design a new solution of this whiteboard and to deploy as fast as possible. Okay, what we face as IT is not a request of the maximum performance. Our researchers ask us for flexibility then, and want to be able to have the maximum possible flexibility in configuring the systems. How can I say I, we can deploy as more test cluster on the visual infrastructure in minutes or we can use GPU inside the infrastructure tests, of test of new algorithm for deep learning. And we can use faster storage inside the virtualization to see how certain algorithm would vary with our internal developer can leverage the latest, the beat in storage like NVME, MVMS or so. And this is why at the certain point, we decided to try visualization as a base for HPC and scientific computing, and we are happy. >> Yeah, I think Maurizio described it it's flexibility. And of course, if you think optimal performance, you're looking at the bare medal, but in this day and age, as I stated at the beginning, there's so much technology, so much infrastructure available that flexibility at times trump the raw performance. So, when you have two different research departments, two different portions, two different parts of the company looking for an environment. No two environments are going to be exactly the same. So you have to be flexible in how you aggregate the different components of the infrastructure. And then think about today it's actually fantastic. Maurizio was sharing with me earlier this year, that at some point, as we all know, there was a lot down. You could really get into a data center and move different cables around or reconfigure servers to have the right ratio of memory, to CPU, to storage, to accelerators, and having been at the forefront of this enablement has really benefited University of Pisa and given them that flexibility that they really need. >> Wonderful, well, Maurizio my understanding, I believe you're giving a presentation as part of the activities this week. Give us a final glimpses to, you know, what you want your peers to be taking away from what you've done? >> What we have done that is something that is very simple in the sense that we adapt some open source software to our infrastructure in order to enable our system managers and users to deploy HPC and AI solution fastly and in an easy way to our VMware infrastructure. We started doing a sort of POC. We designed the test infrastructure early this year and then we go fastly to production because we had about the results. And so this is what we present in the sense that you can have a lot of way to deploy Vitola HPC, Barto. We went for a simple and open source solution. Also, thanks to our friends of Dell Technologies in some parts that enabled us to do the works and now to go in production. And that's theory told before you talked to has a lot during the pandemic due to the effect that stay at home >> Wonderful, Thierry, I'll let you have the final word. What things are you drawing customers to, to really dig in? Obviously there's a cost savings, or are there any other things that this unlocks for them? >> Yeah, I mean, cost savings. We talked about flexibility. We talked about utilization. You don't want to have a lot of infrastructure sitting there and just waiting for a job to come in once every two months. And then there's also the world we live in, and we all live our life here through a video conference, or at times through the interface of our phone and being able to have this web based interaction with a lot of infrastructure. And at times the best infrastructure in the world, makes things simpler, easier, and hopefully bring science at the finger tip of data scientists without having to worry about knowing every single detail on how to build up that infrastructure. And with the help of the University of Pisa, one of our centers of excellence in Europe, we've been innovating and everything that's been accomplished for, you know at Pisa can be accomplished by our customers and our partners around the world. >> Thierry, Maurizio, thank you much for so much for sharing and congratulations on all I know you've done building up that COE. >> Thanks to you. >> Thank you. >> Stay with us, lots more covered from VMworld 2020. I'm Stu Miniman as always. Thank you for watching the theCUBE. 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Published Date : Sep 30 2020

SUMMARY :

brought to you by the VMworld of course, the global virtual event. here in the United States, yeah. So either for the teaching or you know, you're the CTO there. So consider that the University of Pisa and then, you know, Thierry in the past our services. that are fighting the the virus. background in the HPC space, so in the biggest Maurizio and the team are the keynote, you know, Jensen, because of the resources You know, the joke we in the sense that we have an and having been at the as part of the activities this week. and now to go in production. What things are you drawing and our partners around the world. Thierry, Maurizio, thank you much Thank you for watching the theCUBE.

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