I'm really curious why. This seems like an ok enough idea but hardly anything innovative. Is it just because the founders are bloggers and have a large following that it's getting traction? There's barely a description of what the product will be.
Calling these founders bloggers is perhaps true in the strictest sense of the word, as in they surely have blogs but that's not why some people perk up at this news.
Jessie Frazelle did some serious Docker work, went on to work on Kubernetes, Hyper-V, a brief stint at Github saw her working on their Actions product.
Bryan Cantrill was working on the Solaris kernel for a decade, his dtrace is particularly famous. And then he was CTO at Joyent. You maybe have heard one of the projects they helped with called node.js?
I'm on the comment page here because all of the articles have less information than the comments! Thank you HackerNews users for giving us the skinny on Oxide.
Cantrill is one of the people responsible for dtrace, and more or less the only Sun-alumni who's not retired or disappeared (a lot of them stopped blogging when Oracle killed the Sun blogging culture and site/killed Sun). He also was the CTO of Joyent.
Frazelle was one of the people responsible for Docker.
I think Tuck is a finance guy who used to be a sysadmin? And he was COO of Joyent for a while, apparently.
Engineers blogging about Solaris etc.
Internals, gotchas, upcoming things, heads-ups on problems. The patching guys' blog was particularly useful in the face of Solaris' atrocious packaging utils, for example.
There was a _huge_ amount of official-unofficial documentation in the blogs that disappeared from the Sun site when Oracle ran its bulldozer through it.
Sun very strongly encouraged their employees to have blogs, and was either one of or the first to do so (especially at their level). Basically no restrictions on subject matter. Even their CEO regularly blogged!
A better question would be "What didn't Oracle do to kill the Sun blogging culture?"
She's not. She left Docker a fair few years ago, was at Google for a little while, then Microsoft for a while, then GitHub, and was then -- as far as I know -- freelancing (until this announcement).
EDIT: Got Microsoft and GitHub the wrong way around.
Almost more interesting than two giants who, for better or worse, have drastically influenced modern computing practices starting a company, is that they started a podcast. The former happens every day, and sure, it's exciting, but how many times have you seen one of these people start a podcast?
Not sure who any of these people are, or what exactly their “computer company” sells. Do they custom build computers like Falcon Northwest or System76 or something? People need to improve their skills at conveying information; fast and efficiently.
The discussions about the title are interesting to me. I have followed both Jessie and Bryan for years, and seeing their names together and "computer company" got me exceptionally excited!
If you don’t know those people, the entire title falls flat. Imagine if it was just some random people starting a computer company, which could be damn near anything.
To copy my earlier comment that I think was posted before you sent this:
Cantrill is one of the people responsible for dtrace, and more or less the only Sun-alumni who's not retired or disappeared. He also was the CTO of Joyent.
Frazelle was one of the people responsible for Docker.
I think Tuck is a finance guy who used to be a sysadmin? And he was COO of Joyent for a while, apparently.
---
It seems to be a server company. This is somewhat significant, because one of Cantrill's previous endeavors was at a company famous for making a once-great architecture that got killed by x86, one of the few remaining UNIX server operating systems (that was later effectively killed by Linux), and physical machines. Tuck is from Joyent, which was one of the first companies to really "get" the cloud, and Frazelle was from Docker, which should be modern enough for you to understand why it's significant.
I also came here excited about a possible new computer manufacturer along the lines of System76 or Apple. Lo and behold it's yet another "cloud" company, except they are doing on premise "cloud". Please let's stop using the term "cloud" so horribly wrong. I digress.
"While we don’t specify experience levels with particular languages or tools, you’ve almost certainly done work in C and assembly – and you have probably started to play with Rust if you haven’t already outright fallen in love with it."
well what i am getting from cantrill's article is that they wanna build the hardware and the software together. i think maybe on-prem contracts with ibm or dell might not be the target here. in fact open firmware got mentioned a few times.
i wish them luck, it's a very interesting approach they are taking here.
$300 a year is nothing compared to colocating your own server, or even getting a business-grade network connection.
If you can get away with hosting on your own computer on a residential connection, that's great for you, but it's a totally different product from what AWS/GCP/colocation offer.
By the way, reserved instance pricing on AWS and GCP starts around $20/year. But if you know how to use S3/GS and Dynamo/Datastore, you don't even have to use an instance.
After paying to colocate an old rack server and paying exorbitant amounts as a student, I now enjoy using pay-for-what-you-use AWS and GCP services.
A colo box can be great if you can amortize the cost among a dozen friends. Otherwise, I think your money goes much farther on AWS and GCP, especially if you know some basic cost saving techniques like reserved instances or not using instances at all (Lambda, Fargate, S3 and other on-demand services/their Google equivalents can cover a lot of needs nowadays).
Having done both rack server and cloud... I honestly prefer the rack server. Power is cheap in my area, we have fiber, and I like being able to buy an SSD on Amazon for $100 and walk over and slide it in without having to pay an ongoing increased monthly rate. Uptime isn't as good but that's fine if the stuff isn't critical.
I am not sure about this. It seems all their experience is geared towards software with little to nobody from a traditional hardware engineering background. Wouldn't they be better off using open compute[1] designs and focusing on the software inside? Building hardware just seems like a stretch trying to compete against Dell, HP, and Supermicro all of which have "Kubernetes" / high density offerings.
Wouldn't they be better off using open compute designs and focusing on the software inside?
How do you know that's not what they're doing? If they sell servers it doesn't mean they designed them. I wouldn't be surprised if they have some hardware changes for secure boot or something though.
For those that don't know "Soul of a New Machine" is a book by Tracey Kidder. Its about the team at Data General building a new computer. I was skeptical about this book, but its really quite a good read. (My mom worked at Data General, which is how I ended up with the book)
If you like this book, then you'll also like Reminiscences of a Stock Operator, which is a fictionalized account of an occasionally successful stock trader named Jesse Lauriston Livermore who was born in 1877. It doesn't sound captivating, but it is.
All 3 titles should [probably, IMO] be corrected to name "Server Company". A "computer" is a superset of servers, desktops, laptops, embedded devices and mobile devices. That way it is more accurate. Currently it is ambiguous what the "computer company" is actually going to "do"/produce/sell.
This is like arguing whether Amazon is a tech company or a retail services company. The S&P say it's a retail services company, but we all agree it is powered almost thoroughly by technology in general.
When Amazon formed, Bezos described it as a website you could buy books from. I'm sure the authors could have picked a plain-English description as well.
Yeah, I was interested when they said "computer company", which the average reader would associate with Apple or Dell but the homepage described something entirely different, and much less interesting to anybody who isn't a sysadmin.
Definitely the second one. The sad thing is that there are investors/consumers out there who give bonus points to companies who go through this arbitrary stuff
Consider how much time certain founders spend at networking conferences telling stories about things that are extremely tangential to the actual technical advantages that help businesses compete. Then study how successful they are compared to those who don't.
My point here is that a lot of businesses secure funding and clients through "qualitative" means (WeWork) rather than through technical means (AMD)
True, but was any hardware prototyping or design actually happening in that garage? Or were they just using the garage to write blog posts and record a podcast?
The post has a photo of the actual garage in use. https://blog.jessfraz.com/img/garage.jpg It specifically says: "In typical cliche computer company fashion we have been working out of my garage."
Is this "computer company" a hardware company? If so that garage is astonishingly spartan for a workspace I presume prototyping is supposed to happen at.
Looks like one of the higher end hobbyist Weller soldering irons and an old single channel bench power supply. I'd have to hazard that this is an office that happened to be set up in a garage.
I started with Oxide a few weeks ago and I promise I've spent a number of work days in the garage! Until we get some furniture in the new office building it's been a good place to get together.
It's really upsetting to me to see how many folks here are asking who these people are. I think young engineers are losing sight of not only how computers and the internet started, but how underlying technologies work. Oh well peanut butter.
Well, to be fair, I feel like I know a little about how computers work and the internet started, but I didn't know all these names off the top of my head either. (To be fair, one rang a bell)
I think it's a very different thing to know how something works than who put it together. These days there are so many important software projects, and a lot of people working on each. It's nearly impossible to keep track of. Personally, I think how it works is much more useful than who wrote it originally, especially since these days, most software projects of note have a fair number of contributors.
I would have no idea who they were if not for stumbling across one of bryan cantrills early talks by clicking random videos on youtube, watched all his talks that I can find since then.
Why is it upsetting? It isn't an instinct and isn't a basic law of nature (so it can't be derived), so at some point in time one has to learn it. So at some point they have to ask who they are.
I am happy to see this community answer it, but so people don't feel afraid to ask questions, and so people can learn!
I apologize if this is a silly question, but what exactly does "computer company" mean? I read the link. I see "oxide computer" which makes me think, oh is this one of those newfangled oxide transistor but I clicked a few links like oxide computer principles of operation hoping to get an idea of what this is but instead I see some stuff about candor, empathy which is not what I thought principles meant in this context. I looked through the comments hoping to see someone explain it but no win there. Oh well. I'm sure someone will explain it.
1. Bad HN title (doesn't say anything about what they did about the computer they made)
2. Landing page image has some generic background and as far as I saw, no tangible product, other than some shelves of their latest workspace.
3. If they could just include some diagram here or there and put some bold text/say they're building AWS for people/startups, that'd be great and to the point
Not bashing them, but just some thoughts I had about their presentation.
Regardless, I'm extremely excited for what they're building. Been waiting for something like this to pop up.
They forgot to add “blockchain” and “machine learning” to complete their BINGO card. “cloud hyperscale innovations” is a good one, though—haven’t heard that one yet.
"Hyperscaler" does have a meaning in the data centre world, and their use of it here speaks to the benefits they hope to deliver, so it's not 100% a marketing buzzword.
Looks like vaporware with nothing to distinguish themselves from the incumbents. Are they going to do anything special other than put their branding on Taiwanese boards?
I've read all of the founders' blog posts now and I'm convinced they've packed every anti-pattern they could find into this startup. It's focus is entirely on the personalities involved and not at all on the product. They talk about their cool new office, funding, they have a 50 point list on values, they have a podcast, a newsletter...
Yet there's essentially nothing about what the product is (that being the only thing most people care about). This reminds me of first time founders who can't wait to get "CEO" business cards. Worry about the product first, last and in-between. The rest is just there to signal to us that your priorities aren't in the right place.
Agreed. I was somewhat confused on why they had more focus on their Podcast than telling me it was an AWS for startups/people.
Maybe sometime in the future when I have time I can go through these long-form types of content, but they say nothing about what they're building on their landing page/don't describe in the level of detail I'm assuming they have in their podcasts.
Similar to what you're saying, it's like buying the swag for a company that doesn't exist.
It seems like they plan to do hardware-software co-design.
Devices (servers, switches?) and firmware designed specifically for their software stack.
A software stack (drivers, OS) designed specifically for their hardware.
Really interested in seeing where this goes.
"Hey look we have this cool solution" -> "Hey look we have a few small to middle tier customers" -> "Hey look we have a big customer" -> "Hey look our big customer bought our company". It's the silicon valley startup shuffle...
They're apparently doing hardware-software co-design for rack-scale servers, integrating some kind of state-of-the-art systems-management features of the sort that "cloud" suppliers like AWS are assumed to be relying on for their offerings.
Kinda interesting ofc, but how many enterprises actually need something like this? If there was an actual perceived need for datacenter equipment to be designed (and hardware-software co-designed) on the "rack scale", we would probably be doing it right and running mainframe hardware for everything.
It starts looking appealing when your monthly AWS bill is deep into the 5 figures and you’re kinda trapped: do you pour your engineering resources into cost-optimizing your infrastructure (doable, but time consuming) or kick the can down the road?
Believe it or not, going private but not having to give up the niceties of AWS or Azure would be quite appealing.
Remember Eucalyptus? Was lead by the former CEO of MySQL. Built an open-source project that attempted to be compatible with AWS. The project is still alive.
Looks like the last release was in 2017. Eight years of releases is a relatively good run. May be of interest to those like Oxide, who are considering similar paths, with the added complexity of firmware, BMCs, roots of trust and OCP-style hardware.
Also, some companies just want their data in-house and not hosted on a remote cloud. Sometimes contracts preclude the use of 3rd party external companies to house critical data.
This is certainly a need in HPC environments. Think of natgas / big oil, finance, science (protein folding, genetic synthesis, genome research, etc). The cloud simply makes no sense for a lot of these industries. We're talking 20k physical computers and using MPI for their research jobs kind of scale. The cloud is not a good fit for those types of envs where they're using 100% of their compute 100% of the time if at all possible.
I would guess the problem with business as usual is that the cost magnitude of doing this means that only companies throwing off serious cash are doing this.
Which has the side effect of their solutions being bespoke, because acceptable cost looks like "Tell me when I need to stop adding zeros to make this happen."
To go another way you either (1) need to be Amazon-scale already (i.e. "there aren't enough zeros to make inefficiency worth our time") or (2) be willing to say no to huge profits out of ideological purity.
Investors do not often sign NDAs covering "ideas", they will sign (and will often ask you to sign) NDAs with scope limited to investment terms and due diligence information.
They're converting Twitter fame into capital funding. Not having a product means you technically don't have an obligation to deliver anything in return for that capital.
According to other comments on this thread all three of the names mentioned are already highly successful and financially independent individuals. I wonder if the high risk tolerance encourages them to focus more on the lifestyle aspects of this project (and if that is a trend we see in other startups founded by already successful individuals).
There is also something about well-off individuals taking investment money to get a fancy office rather then bootstrapping and keeping all the equity/destiny of the company themselves that smells funny to me. I guess its "free money" but I have to wonder if the products would be better if it was sweat equity instead.
> There is also something about well-off individuals taking investment money to get a fancy office rather then bootstrapping and keeping all the equity/destiny of the company themselves that smells funny to me. I guess its "free money" but I have to wonder if the products would be better if it was sweat equity instead.
Based on the description of the company, they are working on hardware.
I'd agree with your statement if this was a pure software company, but anything involving tangible products can require initial capital orders of magnitude more than what 3 engineers are worth..
Speaking of that, does anyone here have a ballpark number for what it would cost and what the minimum order quantity would be like, to get one of the major Taiwanese OEM companies to manufacture an initial run of a custom server product? My guess is that the capital requirement would be in the 10s of millions of dollars.
Contrast this with the website of CoreOS when they were in start up mode. It was all about their product and why it would change the world. CoreOS was perhaps the best startup of the decade in my opinion.
Early CoreOS employee here. CoreOS technology forms the basis of Red Hat's OpenShift 4. It was definitely a product driven acquisition, not any attempt to kill competition.
Success is one of those things that can only be measured with respect to a certain frame of reference. The consumer perspective(s), the investor perspective, and the employee perspective can all lead to wildly different evaluations of a project's success.
On the positive side, you've got the fact that they made it to a profitable exit, which would be hard to ignore if you had a financial stake in the venture. You've got the implication that Red Hat believed that CoreOS was essential to its fortunes in a container-oriented future as a clear vote of confidence that they built something good. The fact that Red Hat kept CoreOS going suggests that they felt it was so good that their existing technology couldn't realistically catch up.
On the negative side, if you don't like Red Hat then, yeah, that certainly counts as selling out.
Regardless of the acquiring company's motivation, being acquired is one of the textbook criteria for a successful startup. The other is becoming a large company by themselves, but this is rare.
And since Red Hat kept Container Linux/CoreOS open source, this wasn't really a move to eliminate competition. They can support enterprise clients, but the open source nature doesn't stop another company from offering their own enterprise support.
> Regardless of the acquiring company's motivation, being acquired is one of the textbook criteria for a successful startup.
Depends on the acquisition price. Acquihires are failures. Investors might get their money back, and everyone else (including founders) walks away with nothing but a job at some company they didn’t necessarily want to work for.
Exactly. They are trying to cash out their Twitter fame. This company is essentially a personality cult at this point. It might turn out wonderful and I'm excited to see what the product will eventually be.
It absolutely does matter... someone with a track record of success will and deserves to get the benefit of the doubt when starting something new compared to someone with a poor track record or no record at all.
Its a biased population? Self-selecting? A track record may be 'somebody who was at the right place at the right time'. A track record of winning the lottery, for instance, doesn't mean squat.
A track record means, at bottom, that they had no disqualifying traits.
Ironic you should pick winning the lottery, because it absolutely DOES mean squat. For instance, the only person I'm aware of with a "track record" of winning the lottery had a system to consistently win the lottery. Had you given your money to him you'd be rich.
I agree, but also “no disqualifying traits” is more valuable than you are giving it credit for. If you want to use the scarce signals available to judge the prospects of a very new startup, biasing for founders with no disqualifying traits is probably not a bad start. There’s a reason YC, TechStars, etc all explicitly say they invest in founders more so than product ideas.
This is a bit of a stretch. Jessie Frazelle might have done good things but she didn't create a lot of software. It's in a whole different magnitute than Carmack (or Cantrill for that matter).
Joyent was acquired by Samsung, and it's not one of the bullshit acquisitions that destroys the projects/products — Samsung is now using Manta/Triton (and ZFS on illumos/SmartOS) at their massive, massive scale.
> Cantrill and Frazelle both have created software used by millions.
And yet here they are building a sever hardware company??
> That's like saying Carmack was just trying to cash out his Facebook fame.
Thats an absurd analogy. Carmack is responsible for arguably the most important advancements in video game design. Specifically for code he personally architected and wrote.
For example - Frazelle is one of 1300 contributors (currently 13th in terms of # of commits) to Docker core. Not to diminish her contribution, but these individuals are contributors, not single handed creators (which was implied), of "software used by millions".
For the record - I enjoy Frazelle's content and personality. I wish her the best, but the commentary here is near cultish.
Not sure why you're responding to me specifically, but I agree with your general premise, but disagree with your specific characterization.
The general criticisms here are warranted and I think are constructive enough that they'd be beneficial to these founders and others seeking to do something similar.
WRT to Frazelle, are you referring to her contributions on the Docker team as "creating software used by millions"? If so, that seems disingenuous, or perhaps she was more of a core contributor than I realized? If not, what software are you referring to?
Isn’t it usually a red flag when the announcement of a startup talks about who the founder(s) and investors are before the product? Am I seeing shades of Theranos here? Why not focus on how far along the product is or the viability of the idea?
Seems like waporware. Unless their idea of rack hardware is bending sheets into racks it not very clear how they would suceed. It's not clear at all what they want to do acctually. Maybe selling kind off custom computer rack servers with vendor lookin? Like IBM mainframes? Except not doing the advanced chips inhouse.
I dunno what your problem with these people is, but Jessie is a Docker maintainer and Bryan built dtrace and went on to do fascinating things with illumos and Joyent. Steve Tuck spent 10 years at Joyent, starting as a Sales Director and ending as President.
These are all serious people, and the first two have reputations built on strong technical contributions to (even ignoring the wild overuse of k8s for resume-driven-development) complex technical products.
Agreed. I would just move on to the next article, except that there is a need here for a company I invest in. The company currently manages thousands of hosts and the cloud is eating into their profits. The hardware out there is way to expensive (or a bad job was done searching) to move away from the cloud. If they can provide good hardware that would allow the thousands of host company to save money if they did it on their own, then we would be interested in looking into it.
Off the top of my head of what would be required besides just cheap hardware.
1) Cloud like software to manage it or k8s native support. I don't know exactly how that would be done, but the administrative costs of using this hardware can't be so high as to make the cloud a more viable option.
2) Some options for network access. Cloud does not just provide VM's but the underlying reliable network with multiple redundant pipes. Comcast Internet access might be good enough, but some customers might require large redundant pipes. While they might NOT need to solve this themselves, they should make sure that the market does provide solutions that when taken into account, allows for cheaper than cloud solutions.
3) Physical location... same as item 2 but for physical location of the hardware.
I remember back in the day managing colos. It really sucked. It was not just hardware costs that sucked. They should just consider that.
> I would just move on to the next article, except that there is a need here for a company I invest in.
This is exactly how any "WeWork" type company sucks in investors. You'd just ignore the stupid out of hand except that it would be so nice to believe that if this company is on the level and IF their product does what they say it will and IF they deliver it in a reasonable time frame then it will solve the problem and somehow make money for investors.
Forget the names and reputations of the people involved... if three random people came up to you at a conference and said "We've formed a company to solve problem X!", wouldn't you wait until they showed an actual product to even think about potentially making decisions based on what they might do?
I think providing reliable compute and storage is not so difficult and for that there are many options that are cheaper than AWS or Azure (e.g. Hetzner cloud, Scaleway, Vultr or DO). The hard part, in my opinion, is providing managed services like relational databases or key-value stores. For that there are far fewer vendors available, so if Oxide manages to build something that makes this easier I think they’d have a pretty solid business case. In general I think we see a trend towards simpler IT and system architectures, which I really like as I think the complexity has become way too high. I e.g. know a company that invested significant resources (people and hardware) in setting up an OpenStack cluster but even after three years never managed to use it in production. From what I’ve heard k8s has a similar complexity problem, so I really think there’s room for a simpler approach to scalable computing.
If SuperMicro plus real estate, power, provisioning, and operating costs isn't competitive with cloud costs, perhaps it might be because the large cloud vendors have entire teams focusing entirely on bringing down the cost of building and operating these things at scale.
Cloud vendors don't have 90% profit margins; the cost of cloud is what it is because operating computers at scale is hard.
Honestly I feel that far too many companies are afraid of building their own servers. In addition to getting exactly what you need for each workload, it can save the company a boatload of money over time. System integrators like Dell charge companies millions of dollars to assemble servers that are no better than anything I could build myself.
Another overlooked benefit of building your own hardware is you don’t need to add complex overhead like virtualization or containers. You can “right size” each server with the perfect amount of CPU, IO and RAM for the processes you will run on it. Paired with a kernel compiled specifically for that server, your businesses applications will be vastly more performant than ones running on a cloud platform.
Honestly, too many businesses hop on the latest fads. The smart ones see the value in going back to the basics.
"...the sharpening desire among customers for a true cloud-like on-prem experience (and the neglect those customers felt in the market) made it more in demand than ever."
I think that's a good summary description.
In other matters I was went looking for the Rust connection (given a name like Oxide) and was not disappointed.
I'm afraid what people mean by that statement and what the startup is going to try to do are completely different things. As in people mean AWS-like cloud services running on multiple servers they control with all the fault tolerance and geographically distributed. But for the startup it probably means cloud services running on expensive servers in a fast local network.
Does that mean "I have servers... Oxide manages the virtualization"?
Or "I bought a rack full of Oxide and now I have my own puddle of elastic compute on-premises." (If you condense a small cloud, you get a puddle, I presume.)
If hardware is involved it would seem like the latter. In which case they'll be competing with Amazon's on-premises solution and commodity hardware.
I wonder if they're trying to eliminate the VM substrate layer that clouds today currently run on by replacing it with hardware and an OS that is more amenable to running containers natively with good isolation/security properties?
Nitro doubles down on VMs instead of abandoning them, but it is indeed a good example of what integrated hardware and software can do.
What they did with Nitro is develop custom PCIe devices to handle storage and networking, so these devices' virtual functions (SR-IOV) are directly passed through to the VMs and now the hypervisor basically has nothing to do other than switching contexts.
"Color Labs, Inc. was a start-up based in Palo Alto, California. Its main product was the eponymous mobile app for sharing photos through social networking. It allowed people to take photos in addition to viewing other photos also taken in the vicinity."
I wouldn't compare the venture in question at all to 'Color'...
They focus on the team because that’s the how startups raise money these days, investors figure they could always pivot to something else. Obviously this can be problematic especially when the founder(s) is good at raising money, see Wework
Fair point "WeWork", but this early on I think the focus of an investor should be more on the founders vs. product/business idea. This early on there's a potential for pivoting, and you'd rather have smart, talented individuals that can deliver vs. a product idea
Real airports have control towers, baggage handlers, and hangers. Seeing them, it is a mistake to assume no flight operations. To assume it's only a cargo cult. Or to assume, in the age of Kickstarters, that it will never be more than marketing. None of which is my prediction of the company's successful shipping of quality product. Some companies never get past the low hanging fruit. Other companies do.
Jessie was employed by Docker, Bryan was CTO of Joyent and Steve was COO of Joyent. They all did some important contribution to the container ecosystem and they are now starting what appears to be a company selling custom cloud hardware.
Looking at their pedigree, I'd hazard that the computers are geared towards running containerized workloads, so "custom cloud hardware" sounds about right.
That seems to be the common theory, but what does that even mean? There's nothing all that special about running containers at the hardware level, they are really just groups of processes that the kernel manages a certain way.
> That seems to be the common theory, but what does that even mean?
It appears their start-up exists to answer this question. I strongly doubt their mission is "compete with Supermicro & Taiwanese ODMs on general-purpose computers"
That's not completely accurate. Hardware & OSes have not been designed for heavy multi-tenancy, leading to (among other issues) cache interference. At Netflix [1], we have to do quite a bit of work to undo that. Bigger orgs like Google have spent more than a decade improving the Linux scheduler in their own fork for similar reasons.
Very interesting link, thanks. Obviously your use case goes way beyond running a standard Docker installation. It sounds like you really want the kernel to schedule containers instead of processes -- which it doesn't really do by default, hence my comment. Perhaps it shouldn't be surprising, that you're able to get these clear performance gains from a highly optimized special-purpose scheduler. Still, I was a bit surprised. :)
However, that's at the OS level. What can realistically be done at the hardware level? It must be possible in theory to design a CPU that's better at this kind of context switching, but I don't know if a new "computer company" really wants to go there.
While that's true, this particular company doesn't seem to be targeting anything that would improve containers (OS optimizations, new CPU). So I think the OP was correct in that simply changing the BMC or making it more secure on boot won't affect containers.
People who worked at Docker, Joyent, and Sun would be the ones to answer your question :). Consider the possibility that the kernel and the h/w are increasingly at odds on commodity server hardware.
Bryan is an O.G. systems engineer who worked at Sun and who's given many great talks and worked on lots of cool projects, and Jessie rose to prominence as a core docker developer and prolific and talented blogger/speaker, among other things. Both are well-known engineers with major contributions to open and closed source systems infrastructure. Steve Tuck I don't know yet, unfortunately.
* Edit: Rephrased from "O.G. Sun Engineer", I don't know how accurate "O.G. systems engineer is", it's all relative anyway. For reference, I I'd consider Jess an "O.G. containerization engineer" :)
From Bryan's linked blog post - he joined Sun in the mid-90's. Sun was founded in 1982, so he was an (excellent) engineer there, but not one the "O.G.s"
Ah whoops! I meant "O.G. systems engineer" in general, independent of his time at Sun, not O.G. in terms of Sun's history! I don't know much about his history other than what I've gleaned from watching a few of his talks.
They must have defined the problem that they're trying to solve if they convinced an investor to fund their company right? If they want to build any interest in what they're doing it you'd think they'd share it.
But no we hear how excited they are and their fifty points defining what company they want to be. If the company's product is top secret then why share anything at all?
> This reminds me of first time founders who can't wait to get "CEO" business cards.
I worked for such a CEO. In the first year we had four week-long retreats to: an island in WA state, Palm springs, Austin, and Banff (that's where the stats team was). TONS of swag. Aeron chairs. New MBPros. Oh, and champagne fridays. Needless to say it burned through it's good will seed round in 1 year, and the CEO begged for another year's worth of money from friends before shuttering. But hey, hype sells in the software world.
Chairs and laptops are fine. Even nice ones. They aren’t what brings down a tech startup. These purchases can speak to the mentality of the founders, but they are also nice all around for quality of life. We spend a lot of time on laptops, sitting in those chairs. The chairs last a long time and hold their value well. Worth every penny. The Trips are kind of telling, though. We are a small consulting firm and have nice laptops, chairs, desks, and keyboards. Those things aren’t the problem :)
Yeah, the red flag in a startup is a founding team who can't explain in a sentence what their product is or why it's different. So far I've read 3 blogs and 4 websites and all I can tell is that they have a garage and also maybe an office.
Their homepage is pretty clear - they are trying to make cloud technologies more accessible in on premises solutions.
I am not an expert in the field, but I work at a place that is very resistant to cloud solutions for certain applications, and getting the same stuff working on prem can be difficult and pricey.
Got to agree here. The idea of a company not providing decent hardware and chairs says a lot. It's a couple thousand per employee at most, for an easy gain in employee satisfaction.
God, I couldn't wait to give up the CEO title. When I brought on a partner I immediately ceded it to him when we discussed roles. He was shocked and thought he would start as the COO for years.
It's such a thankless job and one that has a specific skillset that is fairly rare. You can be the Founder but not the CEO; something people seem to forget in this business.
Reminds me of the top comment from PragmaticPulp in another HN thread [1], where Pragmatic realized the personality very much is the product:
I know two people on the “30 under 30” list. Both of them are incredibly charismatic and charming in person. Their Instagram and Twitter accounts churn out constant brand building material. They both have pseudo-startups with noble causes and vibrant websites. Their startups have a list of impressive advisers, including B-list senators and industry executives.
However, neither of them have made any progress on building an actual business. One of them has supposedly been developing the same simple product for almost 7 years now, but they’ve never been able to produce even a proof of concept prototype.
I thought I was missing something for the longest time, until I let go of the idea that they were really trying to build a company. They’re not. They’re building their personal brand, and succeeding wildly thanks to publications like the “30 under 30” list that have an insatiable appetite for underdog success stories.
Surely some of these companies are legitimately successful with great business models, but they’re mixed into these lists with the brand builders who know how to game the system. I’d be interested in reading an honest “Where are they now” follow up series that checks in with these founders at the 5-year mark after they make this list to see who the real successes are.
A thing I'm curious about is how they plan on handling the supply chain. As a consumer of server products I observe that running a server company is much less a technical problem and much more of a supply chain management problem. As I understand it, it is one of the many reasons why Tim Cook is the CEO of Apple.
That being said, I wonder if the forcing factor behind building their own servers for the big three companies was mostly the inability to get hardware fast enough. Sure, there are tons of other benefits you get after you start building your own servers, but I wonder if they would have been pursued if Dell could land servers on time. In this sense, building your own machines is a much smaller scale to try to supply chain your way around, even if you're Google. That and private companies can be much more agile since they don't have to support existing workloads. Hard drive shortage? Change the spec last minute to not rely on them. This is pretty exciting to see, and there are plenty of third party vendors making money in the space, but they seem to want to revolutionize the space, and I'm curious to see how that happens.
Sometimes, though, getting noticed is the hardest challenge a company can face. In these companies, name brand recognition is worth more than a billion dollars of funding. Kylie Cosmetics is just one example.
I think this is more true in the consumer space. If you're asking me to build a business on your product, I'm going to bolt at the first sign of flakiness (of which these vanity blog posts are a big red flag).
It reminds me of that startup where each of the founders gave themselves a goofy title like 'Cheif Cleverberry' or something like that. I wish I could remember the details. I think it was ex-blackberry employees starting a phone company.
My guess is they want to sell servers with a first class control plane. Something much less clunky than what's currently possible to cobble together with IPMI, PXE, Intel ME, grub, etc. Similar to what AWS, GCP, etc, use internally. And maybe expanding into routers based on these servers, also with a control plane, etc.
I'm extrapolating a lot out of little though. They are very vague.
It's just more signal not to use whatever they end up producing. Whether it was an astroturf campaign or they used personal connections to get HN to re-rank things, it doesn't speak well to transparency, honesty or being customer-centric. I think my original comment was a very valid criticism of vaporware and vanity blog posts used in lieu of actual product information. Trying to sweep that under the rug is not a good look.
There's a strong recency component to the comment ordering. New comments get a boost so they are visible enough to get upvotes if they deserve them, and over time the order settles.
We downweight bilious comments, especially at the top of threads. Why? Because the internet tendency is to make everything ill-tempered, peevish, and gross. The spirit of this site is curiosity (https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html) and for that to have breathing space, there needs to be an active counterweight.
The main thing to understand is that it's a global optimization, not something stupid like supporting particular PR campaigns.
”I've read all of the founders' blog posts now and I'm convinced they've packed every anti-pattern they could find into this startup .... they [list their values] ... yet there’s essentially nothing about what the product is.”
Imagine you and your friends excitedly announcing on your personal homepages that you are setting out to build your passion project into a going concern “not driven by power or greed, but by accomplishment and self-fulfillment” [1] and being flooded in a community of supposed hackers with derision that your post wasn’t a good enough press release.
For some people, the actual human excitement of friends earnestly getting together to build something new primarily because they want to see it in the world is so foreign that they can only snark about it.
Hopefully that kind of response vindicates their values more than it demoralizes.
Until you have a product, there's nothing to talk about. Plenty of teams that seem good end up producing nothing. Announcements like this are a huge red flag to people who have seen this pattern many times over.
Until you have a product, there's nothing to talk about.
Yeah ... if you’re a marketer. People who actually make stuff are allowed to be excited about what they‘ve been working on in their garages and get to tell people more about it on their own schedules. They don’t owe you a feature comparison table every time they talk about their project.
Well, if they want me to build a business on their product then yes, they owe me an explanation as to why I'd do such a thing. As this announcement stands, I wouldn't trust them to focus on the customer first and hence won't be using what they build.
When I use products for business I expect some level of professionalism. It's way too easy to get hung out to dry with a critical piece of infrastructure and a dead company behind it. What they've done here with the vaporware and vanity posts is a classic misstep. It's not product or customer centered, the two things you absolutely must be to succeed in the enterprise world.
This is literally the company blog that we're commenting on, not their personal blog. There's also 3 posts on the HN front page about this same topic and not one of them has any substance. So yes, I'm going to stick with my decades of experience and say they're producing red flags far faster than they're producing product.
I'm very interested in how our industry operates, how purchasing decisions are made and how investors vet opportunities. This intersects all of those areas, I think it's probably worth listening to what people are complaining about instead of just lashing out at them. This isn't just me complaining for no reason, there's a lot wrong with this announcement and it doesn't lead to a healthy industry.
This is just my first impressions so it may be wrong.
Looking at their blog - their proposition appears to me to be, AWS, Google and Azure can build and manage their systems better than Random Corp. trying to build and manage their own servers by ordering from Dell.
Oxide Computer will try and bridge that gap and let anyone buy efficient, manageable servers.
This is of some interest to me as there are lots of use cases for which cloud isn't practical or has regulatory challenges, and this should give organizations for whom this is an issue some good options. If nothing else, it'll be interesting as a target for Google's Anthos or Azure's On-Premises service.
Edit: This is a good summary[1], I think:
> Hyperscalers like Facebook, Google, and Microsoft have what I like to call “infrastructure privilege” since they long ago decided they could build their own hardware and software to fulfill their needs better than commodity vendors. We are working to bring that same infrastructure privilege to everyone else!
Call me skeptical. Part of what allowed Google/Amazon/Facebook to "build their own servers" is that they're ordering 10,000+ at a time from an ODM like Foxconn who doesn't want to deal with people that want 100 at a time.
But with that comes rigid standardization... which typically hasn't worked well in the enterprise. Everybody wants to be cloud-like until they figure out being cloud-like means you lose all of your hardware-level flexibility. Oh you wanted one with 512GB of memory instead of 768? Too bad.
I'm guardedly optimistic. Some people are being nervous about how vague they're being but I'm gonna wait an see if they're just playing very close to the vest. The problem with talking excitedly about the things that are safe to talk about is that it makes it very obviously awkward what isn't being talked about. I'm sure a lot of us got a refresher in how that feels last week.
Backblaze has their own custom server racks and we seem to like them just fine.
Backblaze isn't selling their custom server racks to third parties to make a profit... they built their own initially because they were trying to make it as cheap as humanly possible and cut a ton of corners to get there. They had a ton of growing pains too which is why we're on POD version 6.0, soon to be 7.0. They modified as they ran into hurdles, most of which would've been avoided going with one of the major server vendors. On the flip side, they would have spent a TON more money on features they decided they didn't need, and their business model likely wouldn't have been viable with that overhead.
I HIGHLY doubt Oxide is offering to make small batch custom servers as part of their "bring the cloud on-prem". It's FAR more likely they're talking about taking OCP designs and adding their own software management stack on top.
I disagree. You don't lose hardware level flexibility, you gain hardware level flexibility. "Oh you wanted to only use 256GB memory and X CPU cycles during this time period, unless Y event occurs in which case boost to 1024GB and 4X CPU cycles? And then prioritize which jobs to dynamically scale back in order to make room? Since all your gear is homogeneous and uses a sane management scheduler that's now possible". You don't get that using disparate hardware typically.
> Oh you wanted one with 512GB of memory instead of 768? Too bad.
I believe Enterprises are (slowly) learning this lesson. If nothing else Pivotal Cloud Foundry and various on-prem k8s solutions are softening them up.
>Oxide Computer will try and bridge that gap and let anyone buy efficient, manageable servers.
>This is of some interest to me as there are lots of use cases for which cloud isn't practical or has regulatory challenges, and this should give organizations for whom this is an issue some good options.
Sounds, to me, as the exact premise of OpenStack, no?
The premise maybe, but in reality OpenStack (initially) punted on a lot of essential parts like physical server management, installation, upgrades, monitoring, billing, etc. Just things like firmware updates are super-buggy in existing servers so I imagine Oxide will be working on that.
It seems like they are dismissing the hyperconverged offerings from Simplivity, Nutanix, Azure Stack, etc which are definitely on premises offerings that would aim to do what they are setting out on
I don't think I'd want to buy anything from someone so willing to pull the DYKWIA card in response to polite messages that weren't even directed at them in the first place https://twitter.com/jessfraz/status/891200262068736000
Jessie Frazelle is not a reasonable, stable person.
E: I get that this might seem a bit harsh, but I think it's perfectly fair to call out founders for their previous (public!) shitty behaviour. Remember Mahbod Moghadam?
> Hyperscalers like Facebook, Google, and Microsoft have what I like to call “infrastructure privilege” since they long ago decided they could build their own hardware and software to fulfill their needs better than commodity vendors. We are working to bring that same infrastructure privilege to everyone else. [0]
Is this same infrastructure privilege an effective, internal cloud? From my experience with large internal cloud platforms, the problems are almost always organizational ones.
Regardless, I am definitely hoping that Oxide can provide a better experience. Maybe with centralizing all hardware into a single group, rather than have network folks do switches, another team do servers, and a totally separate group to do ACL's, etc. you could improve the experience of managing an entire datacenter.
In the same post, the author writes: "If you want to read more about some of the deep technical problems we will be solving check out my ACM Queue articles" followed by some links. The first, on open-source firmware, even appears to be freely available: https://queue.acm.org/detail.cfm?id=3349301
So that may help get the necessary context for this company launch.
Frankly, for me, "Jessie and Bryan are going to start selling computers" is enough for me to get excited about it. I'm not sure I could give you an in-depth rundown, because well, I'm not privy to any information, and obviously this announcement is a bit light on details. Some quotes from both of their posts that I think are important:
> hardware and software should each be built with the other in mind.
> even as the world is moving (or has moved) to elastic, API-driven computing, there remain good reasons to run on one’s own equipment!
> Over the last year, I had the opportunity to spend a lot of time talking with folks who are currently running workloads on premises. The consensus from all my conversations has been that everyone setting up infrastructure themselves is in a great deal of pain and they have been largely neglected by any existing vendor. All these folks have very good reasons for running on premises that include security, strategic reasons like latency, specialized workloads, or the reality that the unit economics of running at their scale in the cloud are unsustainable.
> the world needed a company to develop and deliver integrated, hyperscaler-class infrastructure to the broader market — that we needed to start a computer company.
> Hyperscalers like Facebook, Google, and Microsoft have what I like to call “infrastructure privilege” since they long ago decided they could build their own hardware and software to fulfill their needs better than commodity vendors. We are working to bring that same infrastructure privilege to everyone else!
> could we find an investor who saw what we saw in Oxide? Fortunately, the answer to this question had been emphatic and unequivocal: [yes]
About 30% of the top HN posts every day are advertisements. Click on the "past" link at the top, go back each day. It's either a company or a software project trying to get eyeballs. And why not? This site exists because a business person wanted to show off their investments.
It definitely happens, but the moderators have been good at keeping that to a minimum. And even with guerilla advertising, the comments can offer critiques of features, or suggest alternatives. That's much more helpful than pure astroturfing when all the comments are pro-product in question.
I follow Jessie and Bryan both on Twitter and at least with what Jessie has been exploring since she left her last job, this seems like a natural progression.
It trips me out to see other people in the comments that don't know who Jessie and Bryan are. They're legends to me, and I consider myself basically a SRE. I highly recommend following them on Twitter as well as virtually any talk they've given. Just go type their names into YouTube. Steve Tuck doesn't ring a bell for me, but considering the company he's in I want to learn more about Steve.
I'm super interested to see what comes out of this. I think Jessie has a passion for security (also many other things, but it's what comes to mind), and Bryan for debugging (similarly, many other things as well). I think those are really good backgrounds to have when approaching hardware these days, considering the recent security vulnerabilities around speculative attacks on hardware (specter etc.).
Some of the conversations Jessie started on twitter in the past few months raised some interesting questions around open hardware and open firmware, and the problems with proprietary and closed source hardware and firmware.
It sounds like this Oxide project might be in a similar space as https://www.opencompute.org/. I'll be interested to see if they partner at all. I'm also very interested to see what the actual products are, how open any hardware or firmware ends up being, and if this venture is successful, if they end up at the same place as any other major hardware company or if they tread new ground.
> It trips me out to see other people in the comments that don't know who Jessie and Bryan are.
I always find this funny. Why would everyone know who they are? There are thousands of interesting people in tech. It's impossible to know of everyone.
> There are thousands of interesting people in tech. It's impossible to know of everyone.
Totally! If you aren't familiar with who Jessie or Bryan are yet though I think you're in for a treat. So keeping in mind these are largely impressions from their public personas and I know neither of these people personally...
Bryan is one of my favorite speakers / presenters. Virtually every one of his talks conveys his passion and knowledge for the subject at hand, and it's presented in as much depth as the time allows for and any nuance involved, and Bryan conveys a great sense of humor with little tolerance for BS. Here's a non-comprehensive list of talks Bryan has given from his blog: http://dtrace.org/blogs/bmc/2018/02/03/talks/ .
Jessie, to me, is like the Adam Savage of tech: curious, interested in a ton of different things, a maker and tinkerer, and just a generally hard working huge talent. I love her sense of humor, and she puts content out into the world just to share that with others. Like she got to go tour CERN back in May and shared a bunch of cool stuff from it like this https://twitter.com/jessfraz/status/1129845849054253056 which I really enjoyed. If you're on Twitter, I highly recommend following https://twitter.com/jessfraz .
If you have recommendations for other awesome interesting people worth knowing, I'd love suggestions!
Interesting idea, and I wish them the best of luck. However this line:
> _Further, as cloud-borne SaaS companies mature from being strictly growth focused to being more margin focused, it seems likely that more will consider buying machines instead of always renting them_
Is not something I think to be true from my experience of being in a large company that has moved away from on-prem hosting to cloud providers. Cloud is cheaper. A lot cheaper, especially if using managed services (with the proper arch! With the exception of logging which is surprisingly expensive). The hardware costs of rolling your own hosting is not the expensive part.
Though isn’t that the “commodity” part of their infrastructure? They’re presumably still spending like gangbusters on their “on premises” ISP-local hardware & software.
I imagine that’s the extreme end of the market Oxide is targeting: Provide a HW/SW platform to build your differentiation on, because the capabilities and value (& moat) aren’t there in the commodity cloud.
I really think this shouldn't be an either-or thing, most especially for established companies, but to some extent for growing ones as well.
If you run a data center in the same city/cities as your engineering strengths are located, that doesn't necessarily give you the geographical diversity you need for many companies. But if you don't run any data centers, you're blind to some of the cost structures, and architectural limitations of the system, and you can become soft.
I was going to make a simile to Google and Facebook having their own hardware divisions, but I don't really need to, because they are planning to make cloud-friendly custom hardware for data centers. This seems like an area that the incumbents should be all over but I can't recall the last time I read of innovations from them. Which means there is space for someone new to establish a toe-hold.
If I were based in Chicago I'd want a data center in Chicago, and Cloud Servers on the West Coast, (and Europe, etc as applicable). But the lock-in situation is untenable to me right now. It's pretty easy to end up deploying multiple solutions for the same situation. That just complicates reasoning about the system. It bears a resemblance to the Lavaflow antipattern and I can tell you that either can be no fun at all.
I'm not sure why I chose the phrase 'planning to' about custom hardware, when we know that they've been doing this for a very long time, and FB in particular has not only published designs but multiple cycles of amendments to those designs.
The expensive part is the capacity per dollar. It's not cloud vs on prem. The real value play is colocation. Imagine operational costs at $100/mo for a terabyte of RAM and 32 cores on unmetered bandwidth compared to the equivalent at aws.
Most sv startups don't care about operational costs but they do care about capital costs of buying the hardware. Primarily due to the very short term focus. I think their own resumes are important too vs their employers' long term viability so everyone pushes aws or azure etc because it's hot tech.
Thinking long term is not a silicon valley thing. It's a totally different mindset.
At the very lowest end, colocation is a clear winner in value, even up to a few servers, it stands up well. Once you have multiple servers, and need to start load-balancing some sets of servers to deal with load spikes, cloud-based infrastructure starts to have some benefits that make it competitive and possible cheaper in some instances, because of load scaling and ease of turn-up of new systems. If you're increasing load by 20% or more a month, you likely will have major problems provisioning servers fast enough unless you gamble that trend will increase for a year or more and make a much larger investment than your normal monthly spend to account for it up front.
Once you get really large though you can actually just colocate a bunch of systems and storage and throw a hypervisor manager on them and get almost all the benefits of a cloud based system for an up-front cost that's probably not much more than a dew months of your cloud costs (it looks like 3-4 months is the break-even on some large AWS instances I just looked at compared to some 64-core/512GB boxes I specced out recently). You won't be able to scale quite as immediately to large load increases unless you under-provision, but at that point you're large enough that you should have a handle on what your load spikes are like, and maybe even be able to supplement with could offerings in a pinch.
In a way, cloud-based offerings allow medium-to-large businesses to have a sort of insurance on scaling, in that they are paying more for it, but they can stop at the right amount for their need or even back-off because of problems (or engineering coming up with a better way to handle some load).
> from being strictly growth focused to being more margin focus
And hilariously, the margin gains are not in COGS (e.g. computing) but in reductions/efficiencies in S&M and R&D. Most modern SaaS companies are 80% gross margins.
> it seems likely that more will consider buying machines instead of always renting them
And the companies buying physical hardware will want to know if the vendor supplying the hardware is going to be around to support the hardware in 5 years when they need to be refreshed.
It seems like they are building a product that is anti-trend. Seems odd.
EDIT:
> Cloud is cheaper. A lot cheaper, especially if using managed services
Plenty of companies, including medium-sized companies and companies in non-tech industries (finance, healthcare, defense, etc.)
Generally for regulatory/security reasons, and also because it can make financial sense.
I can see that Dell, Lenovo, etc. are already offering "Kubernetes" optimized servers; it's not clear how much of it is just marketing, though. Perhaps this new company wants to offer something similar, but be more competitive by taking advantage of superior software design skills (if I understand it correctly). Then it would just be a middleware company disguising itself as a "computer company".
I've been involved in two investigations into migrating from an incumbent on-prem cloud to The Cloud. Once directly, once tangentially. Both times, the conclusion was that The Cloud would almost certainly increase our IT costs, and also submit us to vendor lock-in.
I see The Cloud as being a great play for new companies, and companies with server needs that are both variable and out of phase with everyone else's. Small startups because time is their most precious resource, and picking a major PaaS provider minimizes the time spent making decisions about things that are tangential to the core business. e.g., if you use AWS then you don't have to hesitate for a moment on your object store; it's going to be S3. If you use on-prem cloud, then you'll likely have to burn a few weeks shopping around for vendors and getting it rolled out before you can be up and running. Multiply that cost by every single decision, and you've got a whole lot of distraction hitting you at the most inconvenient possible time.
Sounds like they are building a new OS written in rust sitting at the level of bios, beneath a standard Linux kernel. This will be an open source bios running at or below the hypervisor supervisor ring level.
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[ 0.29 ms ] story [ 275 ms ] threadBrian's: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=21682358
Jessie Frazelle did some serious Docker work, went on to work on Kubernetes, Hyper-V, a brief stint at Github saw her working on their Actions product.
Bryan Cantrill was working on the Solaris kernel for a decade, his dtrace is particularly famous. And then he was CTO at Joyent. You maybe have heard one of the projects they helped with called node.js?
Frazelle was one of the people responsible for Docker.
I think Tuck is a finance guy who used to be a sysadmin? And he was COO of Joyent for a while, apparently.
How did Oracle kill the Sun blogging culture? What/Who was the Sun blogging culture?
There was a _huge_ amount of official-unofficial documentation in the blogs that disappeared from the Sun site when Oracle ran its bulldozer through it.
A better question would be "What didn't Oracle do to kill the Sun blogging culture?"
[1] https://blog.jessfraz.com/post/dogfooding-docker-to-test-doc...
EDIT: Got Microsoft and GitHub the wrong way around.
She went from Microsoft->Github, not the other way around, but other than that you're correct.
> Hyperscaler infrastructure for the rest of us
> Oxide is building a new kind of server.
> True rack-scale design, bringing cloud hyperscale innovations around density, efficiency, cost, reliability, manageability, and security to everyone running on-premises compute infrastructure.
They're building servers, for people who run their own compute infrastructure.
The current title conveys 0 useful information. Don’t know who those people are and a “computer company” could be anything.
Cantrill is one of the people responsible for dtrace, and more or less the only Sun-alumni who's not retired or disappeared. He also was the CTO of Joyent.
Frazelle was one of the people responsible for Docker.
I think Tuck is a finance guy who used to be a sysadmin? And he was COO of Joyent for a while, apparently.
---
It seems to be a server company. This is somewhat significant, because one of Cantrill's previous endeavors was at a company famous for making a once-great architecture that got killed by x86, one of the few remaining UNIX server operating systems (that was later effectively killed by Linux), and physical machines. Tuck is from Joyent, which was one of the first companies to really "get" the cloud, and Frazelle was from Docker, which should be modern enough for you to understand why it's significant.
Pumped about Rust.
Glad that Oxide will hopefully allow people and companies to utilize their infrastructure on components that may not be so old/may be easier to use.
i wish them luck, it's a very interesting approach they are taking here.
If you can get away with hosting on your own computer on a residential connection, that's great for you, but it's a totally different product from what AWS/GCP/colocation offer.
By the way, reserved instance pricing on AWS and GCP starts around $20/year. But if you know how to use S3/GS and Dynamo/Datastore, you don't even have to use an instance.
At the moment I just use EC2 and GCP instances (and a couple of GCS buckets)
On Google, the comparable offering is an f1-micro instance, which goes for $3.88/month (https://cloud.google.com/compute/vm-instance-pricing#pricing).
A colo box can be great if you can amortize the cost among a dozen friends. Otherwise, I think your money goes much farther on AWS and GCP, especially if you know some basic cost saving techniques like reserved instances or not using instances at all (Lambda, Fargate, S3 and other on-demand services/their Google equivalents can cover a lot of needs nowadays).
> setting up infrastructure themselves is in a great deal of pain and they have been largely neglected by any existing vendor
Can you elaborate on what these pains are, and how OEMs aren't helping their customers with this?
I guess what I'm trying to ask is: what will Oxide do different compared to existing OEMs?
I am not sure about this. It seems all their experience is geared towards software with little to nobody from a traditional hardware engineering background. Wouldn't they be better off using open compute[1] designs and focusing on the software inside? Building hardware just seems like a stretch trying to compete against Dell, HP, and Supermicro all of which have "Kubernetes" / high density offerings.
[1] https://www.opencompute.org/
How do you know that's not what they're doing? If they sell servers it doesn't mean they designed them. I wouldn't be surprised if they have some hardware changes for secure boot or something though.
https://blog.jessfraz.com/post/new-golden-age-of-building-wi...
http://dtrace.org/blogs/bmc/2019/02/10/reflecting-on-the-sou...
The book won a Pulitzer prize for non-fiction.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Soul_of_a_New_Machine
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reminiscences_of_a_Stock_Opera...
Or was it just a folkloric step that is now required by any computer company to emulate other successes in Silicon Valley?
My point here is that a lot of businesses secure funding and clients through "qualitative" means (WeWork) rather than through technical means (AMD)
https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html
The garage thing was too much for my taste! It's like trying to forcibly resurrect Apple or HP's first years in the 2020s.
Do people still need physical presence in a garage to get things done? Working remotely is now an established practice...
I think it's a very different thing to know how something works than who put it together. These days there are so many important software projects, and a lot of people working on each. It's nearly impossible to keep track of. Personally, I think how it works is much more useful than who wrote it originally, especially since these days, most software projects of note have a fair number of contributors.
His blog post http://dtrace.org/blogs/bmc/2018/02/03/talks/ with all his talks let me see a few of the ones I had originally missed
I am happy to see this community answer it, but so people don't feel afraid to ask questions, and so people can learn!
Put another way: https://www.xkcd.com/1053/
1. Bad HN title (doesn't say anything about what they did about the computer they made)
2. Landing page image has some generic background and as far as I saw, no tangible product, other than some shelves of their latest workspace.
3. If they could just include some diagram here or there and put some bold text/say they're building AWS for people/startups, that'd be great and to the point
Not bashing them, but just some thoughts I had about their presentation.
Regardless, I'm extremely excited for what they're building. Been waiting for something like this to pop up.
From Jessie's blog post [0] it looks like this is the actual garage where she supposedly started the company.
But I agree, there is absolute zero information on the product they are planning to build.
Probably because they are still working on fundraising.
[0] https://blog.jessfraz.com/post/born-in-a-garage/
"Oxide is building a new kind of server.
True rack-scale design, bringing cloud hyperscale innovations around density, efficiency, cost, reliability, manageability, and security to everyone running on-premises compute infrastructure."
>Kick butt, have fun, don’t cheat, love our customers, change computing forever
Yet there's essentially nothing about what the product is (that being the only thing most people care about). This reminds me of first time founders who can't wait to get "CEO" business cards. Worry about the product first, last and in-between. The rest is just there to signal to us that your priorities aren't in the right place.
It's baby steps all the way at this phase.
Maybe sometime in the future when I have time I can go through these long-form types of content, but they say nothing about what they're building on their landing page/don't describe in the level of detail I'm assuming they have in their podcasts.
Similar to what you're saying, it's like buying the swag for a company that doesn't exist.
Kinda interesting ofc, but how many enterprises actually need something like this? If there was an actual perceived need for datacenter equipment to be designed (and hardware-software co-designed) on the "rack scale", we would probably be doing it right and running mainframe hardware for everything.
Believe it or not, going private but not having to give up the niceties of AWS or Azure would be quite appealing.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eucalyptus_(software)
https://github.com/eucalyptus/eucalyptus/releases
Which has the side effect of their solutions being bespoke, because acceptable cost looks like "Tell me when I need to stop adding zeros to make this happen."
To go another way you either (1) need to be Amazon-scale already (i.e. "there aren't enough zeros to make inefficiency worth our time") or (2) be willing to say no to huge profits out of ideological purity.
The well-funded client / custom trap is real.
There is also something about well-off individuals taking investment money to get a fancy office rather then bootstrapping and keeping all the equity/destiny of the company themselves that smells funny to me. I guess its "free money" but I have to wonder if the products would be better if it was sweat equity instead.
Read up before you make unfounded claims
Based on the description of the company, they are working on hardware.
I'd agree with your statement if this was a pure software company, but anything involving tangible products can require initial capital orders of magnitude more than what 3 engineers are worth..
https://web.archive.org/web/20131004150004/http://coreos.com...
Edit: I was an early CoreOS employee who was the first "boomerang"
On the positive side, you've got the fact that they made it to a profitable exit, which would be hard to ignore if you had a financial stake in the venture. You've got the implication that Red Hat believed that CoreOS was essential to its fortunes in a container-oriented future as a clear vote of confidence that they built something good. The fact that Red Hat kept CoreOS going suggests that they felt it was so good that their existing technology couldn't realistically catch up.
On the negative side, if you don't like Red Hat then, yeah, that certainly counts as selling out.
And since Red Hat kept Container Linux/CoreOS open source, this wasn't really a move to eliminate competition. They can support enterprise clients, but the open source nature doesn't stop another company from offering their own enterprise support.
Depends on the acquisition price. Acquihires are failures. Investors might get their money back, and everyone else (including founders) walks away with nothing but a job at some company they didn’t necessarily want to work for.
Cantrill and Frazelle both have created software used by millions.
A track record means, at bottom, that they had no disqualifying traits.
https://www.inc.com/bill-murphy-jr/this-couple-found-a-math-...
Joyent was acquired by Samsung, and it's not one of the bullshit acquisitions that destroys the projects/products — Samsung is now using Manta/Triton (and ZFS on illumos/SmartOS) at their massive, massive scale.
https://www.joyent.com/blog/samsung-acquires-joyent
And yet here they are building a sever hardware company??
> That's like saying Carmack was just trying to cash out his Facebook fame.
Thats an absurd analogy. Carmack is responsible for arguably the most important advancements in video game design. Specifically for code he personally architected and wrote.
For example - Frazelle is one of 1300 contributors (currently 13th in terms of # of commits) to Docker core. Not to diminish her contribution, but these individuals are contributors, not single handed creators (which was implied), of "software used by millions".
For the record - I enjoy Frazelle's content and personality. I wish her the best, but the commentary here is near cultish.
I think they have some merit and know a thing or two about computers.
The general criticisms here are warranted and I think are constructive enough that they'd be beneficial to these founders and others seeking to do something similar.
These are all serious people, and the first two have reputations built on strong technical contributions to (even ignoring the wild overuse of k8s for resume-driven-development) complex technical products.
Off the top of my head of what would be required besides just cheap hardware. 1) Cloud like software to manage it or k8s native support. I don't know exactly how that would be done, but the administrative costs of using this hardware can't be so high as to make the cloud a more viable option. 2) Some options for network access. Cloud does not just provide VM's but the underlying reliable network with multiple redundant pipes. Comcast Internet access might be good enough, but some customers might require large redundant pipes. While they might NOT need to solve this themselves, they should make sure that the market does provide solutions that when taken into account, allows for cheaper than cloud solutions. 3) Physical location... same as item 2 but for physical location of the hardware.
I remember back in the day managing colos. It really sucked. It was not just hardware costs that sucked. They should just consider that.
This is exactly how any "WeWork" type company sucks in investors. You'd just ignore the stupid out of hand except that it would be so nice to believe that if this company is on the level and IF their product does what they say it will and IF they deliver it in a reasonable time frame then it will solve the problem and somehow make money for investors.
Forget the names and reputations of the people involved... if three random people came up to you at a conference and said "We've formed a company to solve problem X!", wouldn't you wait until they showed an actual product to even think about potentially making decisions based on what they might do?
Just moved from AWS to Vultr & DO and it's loads cheaper and faster for my use case (lightweight landing pages basically).
Managed services are still incredibly tough because of client support, and like you said, relational databases and key-value stores.
Cloud vendors don't have 90% profit margins; the cost of cloud is what it is because operating computers at scale is hard.
Another overlooked benefit of building your own hardware is you don’t need to add complex overhead like virtualization or containers. You can “right size” each server with the perfect amount of CPU, IO and RAM for the processes you will run on it. Paired with a kernel compiled specifically for that server, your businesses applications will be vastly more performant than ones running on a cloud platform.
Honestly, too many businesses hop on the latest fads. The smart ones see the value in going back to the basics.
"...the sharpening desire among customers for a true cloud-like on-prem experience (and the neglect those customers felt in the market) made it more in demand than ever."
I think that's a good summary description.
In other matters I was went looking for the Rust connection (given a name like Oxide) and was not disappointed.
I'm afraid what people mean by that statement and what the startup is going to try to do are completely different things. As in people mean AWS-like cloud services running on multiple servers they control with all the fault tolerance and geographically distributed. But for the startup it probably means cloud services running on expensive servers in a fast local network.
Or "I bought a rack full of Oxide and now I have my own puddle of elastic compute on-premises." (If you condense a small cloud, you get a puddle, I presume.)
If hardware is involved it would seem like the latter. In which case they'll be competing with Amazon's on-premises solution and commodity hardware.
What they did with Nitro is develop custom PCIe devices to handle storage and networking, so these devices' virtual functions (SR-IOV) are directly passed through to the VMs and now the hypervisor basically has nothing to do other than switching contexts.
I wouldn't compare the venture in question at all to 'Color'...
Uhh, you mean computers?
It appears their start-up exists to answer this question. I strongly doubt their mission is "compete with Supermicro & Taiwanese ODMs on general-purpose computers"
[1] https://medium.com/netflix-techblog/predictive-cpu-isolation...
However, that's at the OS level. What can realistically be done at the hardware level? It must be possible in theory to design a CPU that's better at this kind of context switching, but I don't know if a new "computer company" really wants to go there.
Not for a long while.
The other folks though, I have no idea.
Here are some more links if you're interested: https://blog.jessfraz.com/ https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=bryan+cantrill
* Edit: Rephrased from "O.G. Sun Engineer", I don't know how accurate "O.G. systems engineer is", it's all relative anyway. For reference, I I'd consider Jess an "O.G. containerization engineer" :)
He's not that old!
From Bryan's linked blog post - he joined Sun in the mid-90's. Sun was founded in 1982, so he was an (excellent) engineer there, but not one the "O.G.s"
But no we hear how excited they are and their fifty points defining what company they want to be. If the company's product is top secret then why share anything at all?
I worked for such a CEO. In the first year we had four week-long retreats to: an island in WA state, Palm springs, Austin, and Banff (that's where the stats team was). TONS of swag. Aeron chairs. New MBPros. Oh, and champagne fridays. Needless to say it burned through it's good will seed round in 1 year, and the CEO begged for another year's worth of money from friends before shuttering. But hey, hype sells in the software world.
I am not an expert in the field, but I work at a place that is very resistant to cloud solutions for certain applications, and getting the same stuff working on prem can be difficult and pricey.
Trips are pretty silly though.
It's such a thankless job and one that has a specific skillset that is fairly rare. You can be the Founder but not the CEO; something people seem to forget in this business.
I know two people on the “30 under 30” list. Both of them are incredibly charismatic and charming in person. Their Instagram and Twitter accounts churn out constant brand building material. They both have pseudo-startups with noble causes and vibrant websites. Their startups have a list of impressive advisers, including B-list senators and industry executives.
However, neither of them have made any progress on building an actual business. One of them has supposedly been developing the same simple product for almost 7 years now, but they’ve never been able to produce even a proof of concept prototype.
I thought I was missing something for the longest time, until I let go of the idea that they were really trying to build a company. They’re not. They’re building their personal brand, and succeeding wildly thanks to publications like the “30 under 30” list that have an insatiable appetite for underdog success stories.
Surely some of these companies are legitimately successful with great business models, but they’re mixed into these lists with the brand builders who know how to game the system. I’d be interested in reading an honest “Where are they now” follow up series that checks in with these founders at the 5-year mark after they make this list to see who the real successes are.
[1] The Forbes ‘30 Under 30’ Hustle | Hacker News. (2019, December 02). Retrieved from https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=21082523
That being said, I wonder if the forcing factor behind building their own servers for the big three companies was mostly the inability to get hardware fast enough. Sure, there are tons of other benefits you get after you start building your own servers, but I wonder if they would have been pursued if Dell could land servers on time. In this sense, building your own machines is a much smaller scale to try to supply chain your way around, even if you're Google. That and private companies can be much more agile since they don't have to support existing workloads. Hard drive shortage? Change the spec last minute to not rely on them. This is pretty exciting to see, and there are plenty of third party vendors making money in the space, but they seem to want to revolutionize the space, and I'm curious to see how that happens.
My guess is they want to sell servers with a first class control plane. Something much less clunky than what's currently possible to cobble together with IPMI, PXE, Intel ME, grub, etc. Similar to what AWS, GCP, etc, use internally. And maybe expanding into routers based on these servers, also with a control plane, etc.
I'm extrapolating a lot out of little though. They are very vague.
The main thing to understand is that it's a global optimization, not something stupid like supporting particular PR campaigns.
Imagine you and your friends excitedly announcing on your personal homepages that you are setting out to build your passion project into a going concern “not driven by power or greed, but by accomplishment and self-fulfillment” [1] and being flooded in a community of supposed hackers with derision that your post wasn’t a good enough press release.
For some people, the actual human excitement of friends earnestly getting together to build something new primarily because they want to see it in the world is so foreign that they can only snark about it.
Hopefully that kind of response vindicates their values more than it demoralizes.
[1]: https://blog.jessfraz.com/post/new-golden-age-of-building-wi...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vaporware
Until you have a product, there's nothing to talk about. Plenty of teams that seem good end up producing nothing. Announcements like this are a huge red flag to people who have seen this pattern many times over.
Yeah ... if you’re a marketer. People who actually make stuff are allowed to be excited about what they‘ve been working on in their garages and get to tell people more about it on their own schedules. They don’t owe you a feature comparison table every time they talk about their project.
In fact, they don’t owe you anything at all.
Considering you literally haven’t been told — let alone allowed to use — what they’ve built, that sounds like a reasonable prior.
Looking at their blog - their proposition appears to me to be, AWS, Google and Azure can build and manage their systems better than Random Corp. trying to build and manage their own servers by ordering from Dell.
Oxide Computer will try and bridge that gap and let anyone buy efficient, manageable servers.
This is of some interest to me as there are lots of use cases for which cloud isn't practical or has regulatory challenges, and this should give organizations for whom this is an issue some good options. If nothing else, it'll be interesting as a target for Google's Anthos or Azure's On-Premises service.
Edit: This is a good summary[1], I think:
> Hyperscalers like Facebook, Google, and Microsoft have what I like to call “infrastructure privilege” since they long ago decided they could build their own hardware and software to fulfill their needs better than commodity vendors. We are working to bring that same infrastructure privilege to everyone else!
[1] https://blog.jessfraz.com/post/born-in-a-garage/
But with that comes rigid standardization... which typically hasn't worked well in the enterprise. Everybody wants to be cloud-like until they figure out being cloud-like means you lose all of your hardware-level flexibility. Oh you wanted one with 512GB of memory instead of 768? Too bad.
Backblaze has their own custom server racks and we seem to like them just fine.
I HIGHLY doubt Oxide is offering to make small batch custom servers as part of their "bring the cloud on-prem". It's FAR more likely they're talking about taking OCP designs and adding their own software management stack on top.
I believe Enterprises are (slowly) learning this lesson. If nothing else Pivotal Cloud Foundry and various on-prem k8s solutions are softening them up.
>This is of some interest to me as there are lots of use cases for which cloud isn't practical or has regulatory challenges, and this should give organizations for whom this is an issue some good options.
Sounds, to me, as the exact premise of OpenStack, no?
https://web.archive.org/web/20110513121449/http://www.realwe...
Jessie Frazelle is not a reasonable, stable person.
E: I get that this might seem a bit harsh, but I think it's perfectly fair to call out founders for their previous (public!) shitty behaviour. Remember Mahbod Moghadam?
https://oxide.computer/blog/on-the-metal-1-jeff-rothschild/
> Hyperscalers like Facebook, Google, and Microsoft have what I like to call “infrastructure privilege” since they long ago decided they could build their own hardware and software to fulfill their needs better than commodity vendors. We are working to bring that same infrastructure privilege to everyone else. [0]
Is this same infrastructure privilege an effective, internal cloud? From my experience with large internal cloud platforms, the problems are almost always organizational ones.
Regardless, I am definitely hoping that Oxide can provide a better experience. Maybe with centralizing all hardware into a single group, rather than have network folks do switches, another team do servers, and a totally separate group to do ACL's, etc. you could improve the experience of managing an entire datacenter.
Edit: Forgot the link: [0] https://blog.jessfraz.com/post/born-in-a-garage/
In the same post, the author writes: "If you want to read more about some of the deep technical problems we will be solving check out my ACM Queue articles" followed by some links. The first, on open-source firmware, even appears to be freely available: https://queue.acm.org/detail.cfm?id=3349301
So that may help get the necessary context for this company launch.
> hardware and software should each be built with the other in mind.
> even as the world is moving (or has moved) to elastic, API-driven computing, there remain good reasons to run on one’s own equipment!
> Over the last year, I had the opportunity to spend a lot of time talking with folks who are currently running workloads on premises. The consensus from all my conversations has been that everyone setting up infrastructure themselves is in a great deal of pain and they have been largely neglected by any existing vendor. All these folks have very good reasons for running on premises that include security, strategic reasons like latency, specialized workloads, or the reality that the unit economics of running at their scale in the cloud are unsustainable.
> the world needed a company to develop and deliver integrated, hyperscaler-class infrastructure to the broader market — that we needed to start a computer company.
> Hyperscalers like Facebook, Google, and Microsoft have what I like to call “infrastructure privilege” since they long ago decided they could build their own hardware and software to fulfill their needs better than commodity vendors. We are working to bring that same infrastructure privilege to everyone else!
> could we find an investor who saw what we saw in Oxide? Fortunately, the answer to this question had been emphatic and unequivocal: [yes]
Promoting new businesses is directly on-brand for this place.
If we were inundated with IBM marketing it would be something to complain about.
It trips me out to see other people in the comments that don't know who Jessie and Bryan are. They're legends to me, and I consider myself basically a SRE. I highly recommend following them on Twitter as well as virtually any talk they've given. Just go type their names into YouTube. Steve Tuck doesn't ring a bell for me, but considering the company he's in I want to learn more about Steve.
I'm super interested to see what comes out of this. I think Jessie has a passion for security (also many other things, but it's what comes to mind), and Bryan for debugging (similarly, many other things as well). I think those are really good backgrounds to have when approaching hardware these days, considering the recent security vulnerabilities around speculative attacks on hardware (specter etc.).
Some of the conversations Jessie started on twitter in the past few months raised some interesting questions around open hardware and open firmware, and the problems with proprietary and closed source hardware and firmware.
It sounds like this Oxide project might be in a similar space as https://www.opencompute.org/. I'll be interested to see if they partner at all. I'm also very interested to see what the actual products are, how open any hardware or firmware ends up being, and if this venture is successful, if they end up at the same place as any other major hardware company or if they tread new ground.
I always find this funny. Why would everyone know who they are? There are thousands of interesting people in tech. It's impossible to know of everyone.
Totally! If you aren't familiar with who Jessie or Bryan are yet though I think you're in for a treat. So keeping in mind these are largely impressions from their public personas and I know neither of these people personally...
Bryan is one of my favorite speakers / presenters. Virtually every one of his talks conveys his passion and knowledge for the subject at hand, and it's presented in as much depth as the time allows for and any nuance involved, and Bryan conveys a great sense of humor with little tolerance for BS. Here's a non-comprehensive list of talks Bryan has given from his blog: http://dtrace.org/blogs/bmc/2018/02/03/talks/ .
Jessie, to me, is like the Adam Savage of tech: curious, interested in a ton of different things, a maker and tinkerer, and just a generally hard working huge talent. I love her sense of humor, and she puts content out into the world just to share that with others. Like she got to go tour CERN back in May and shared a bunch of cool stuff from it like this https://twitter.com/jessfraz/status/1129845849054253056 which I really enjoyed. If you're on Twitter, I highly recommend following https://twitter.com/jessfraz .
If you have recommendations for other awesome interesting people worth knowing, I'd love suggestions!
That's what is meant by "cult of personality."
> _Further, as cloud-borne SaaS companies mature from being strictly growth focused to being more margin focused, it seems likely that more will consider buying machines instead of always renting them_
Is not something I think to be true from my experience of being in a large company that has moved away from on-prem hosting to cloud providers. Cloud is cheaper. A lot cheaper, especially if using managed services (with the proper arch! With the exception of logging which is surprisingly expensive). The hardware costs of rolling your own hosting is not the expensive part.
I imagine that’s the extreme end of the market Oxide is targeting: Provide a HW/SW platform to build your differentiation on, because the capabilities and value (& moat) aren’t there in the commodity cloud.
If you run a data center in the same city/cities as your engineering strengths are located, that doesn't necessarily give you the geographical diversity you need for many companies. But if you don't run any data centers, you're blind to some of the cost structures, and architectural limitations of the system, and you can become soft.
I was going to make a simile to Google and Facebook having their own hardware divisions, but I don't really need to, because they are planning to make cloud-friendly custom hardware for data centers. This seems like an area that the incumbents should be all over but I can't recall the last time I read of innovations from them. Which means there is space for someone new to establish a toe-hold.
If I were based in Chicago I'd want a data center in Chicago, and Cloud Servers on the West Coast, (and Europe, etc as applicable). But the lock-in situation is untenable to me right now. It's pretty easy to end up deploying multiple solutions for the same situation. That just complicates reasoning about the system. It bears a resemblance to the Lavaflow antipattern and I can tell you that either can be no fun at all.
Most sv startups don't care about operational costs but they do care about capital costs of buying the hardware. Primarily due to the very short term focus. I think their own resumes are important too vs their employers' long term viability so everyone pushes aws or azure etc because it's hot tech.
Thinking long term is not a silicon valley thing. It's a totally different mindset.
Once you get really large though you can actually just colocate a bunch of systems and storage and throw a hypervisor manager on them and get almost all the benefits of a cloud based system for an up-front cost that's probably not much more than a dew months of your cloud costs (it looks like 3-4 months is the break-even on some large AWS instances I just looked at compared to some 64-core/512GB boxes I specced out recently). You won't be able to scale quite as immediately to large load increases unless you under-provision, but at that point you're large enough that you should have a handle on what your load spikes are like, and maybe even be able to supplement with could offerings in a pinch.
In a way, cloud-based offerings allow medium-to-large businesses to have a sort of insurance on scaling, in that they are paying more for it, but they can stop at the right amount for their need or even back-off because of problems (or engineering coming up with a better way to handle some load).
And hilariously, the margin gains are not in COGS (e.g. computing) but in reductions/efficiencies in S&M and R&D. Most modern SaaS companies are 80% gross margins.
> it seems likely that more will consider buying machines instead of always renting them
And the companies buying physical hardware will want to know if the vendor supplying the hardware is going to be around to support the hardware in 5 years when they need to be refreshed.
It seems like they are building a product that is anti-trend. Seems odd.
EDIT:
> Cloud is cheaper. A lot cheaper, especially if using managed services
This is not universally true.
[1] https://blog.jessfraz.com/post/born-in-a-garage/
I can see that Dell, Lenovo, etc. are already offering "Kubernetes" optimized servers; it's not clear how much of it is just marketing, though. Perhaps this new company wants to offer something similar, but be more competitive by taking advantage of superior software design skills (if I understand it correctly). Then it would just be a middleware company disguising itself as a "computer company".
I see The Cloud as being a great play for new companies, and companies with server needs that are both variable and out of phase with everyone else's. Small startups because time is their most precious resource, and picking a major PaaS provider minimizes the time spent making decisions about things that are tangential to the core business. e.g., if you use AWS then you don't have to hesitate for a moment on your object store; it's going to be S3. If you use on-prem cloud, then you'll likely have to burn a few weeks shopping around for vendors and getting it rolled out before you can be up and running. Multiply that cost by every single decision, and you've got a whole lot of distraction hitting you at the most inconvenient possible time.
And plenty of people run, e.g., OpenStack on their own hardware in their own server rooms / DCs.
The speed of light isn't getting quicker any time soon, so low-latency processing of locally-generated data requires local compute resource.
Computers. Literal, physical computers you can buy and stick in a server rack.
Specifically, computers with the hardware/software optimized and tuned for "hyperscaler" uses (think Kubernetes).
https://www.infoq.com/presentations/os-rust/