Perhaps we could consider not only stating what Crowbar does, but also provide 
a summary of its key benefits.  This should help to explain WHY someone might 
want to use Crowbar.

From: crowbar-bounces On Behalf Of Judd Maltin
Sent: Monday, November 25, 2013 11:08 AM
To: Adam Spiers
Cc: crowbar
Subject: Re: [Crowbar] What is Crowbar exactly?

Might want to say, "bare-metal to fully-provisioned production services" and 
take out cluster, because cluster is prone to imply one service, where Crowbar 
deploys many services.

On Mon, Nov 25, 2013 at 6:22 AM, Adam Spiers 
<aspi...@suse.com<mailto:aspi...@suse.com>> wrote:
I think the problem here is that "move" is a confusing choice of verb,
because Crowbar doesn't really move anything: rather it transforms the
state of those servers.  I've fixed the wording.

Simon Jakesch (simon_jake...@dell.com<mailto:simon_jake...@dell.com>) wrote:
> Matthew,
>
> let me try and answer your questions. In the referenced blurb physical nodes 
> refers to the actual server/box/computer/physical compute unit. Whereas 
> bare-metal is referring to the state (specifically as far as software is 
> concerned) of said physical node. Put more simply, we're talking about 
> servers without any software or any type of configuration whatsoever 
> performed on them.
> Configuring and installing those servers is referred to as "moving" them from 
> one state (bare-metal) to the next state where they are configured, installed 
> and part of a cluster.
>
> Hope this doesn't just make sense to me, let me know if you have further 
> questions.
> Simon
>
> From: crowbar-bounces On Behalf Of Work
> Sent: Wednesday, November 20, 2013 2:48 PM
> To: crowbar
> Subject: [Crowbar] What is Crowbar exactly?
>
> Hello Dell,
>
> Your home page for the Crowbar project (http://crowbar.github.io/home.html)'s 
> big top blurb says
>
> "The Crowbar Project is an effort to build a complete, easy to use 
> operational platform for everyone. It allows for any number of physical nodes 
> to be moved from bare-metal to production cluster within hours."
>
> What do you mean by 'any number of *physical nodes* to be //moved// from 
> *bare-metal* to *production cluster*?
>
> What is the definition of a physical node, and how is it different from 
> bare-metal?
>
> A production cluster makes sense; I assume it is a cluster of physical 
> bare-metal nodes.  So this leads to the final question: What are you moving 
> and from where?
>
> Thanks,
> Matthew Kaufman
> SPCLOPS.COM<http://SPCLOPS.COM><http://SPCLOPS.COM> | 
> 202-407-7998<tel:202-407-7998>

> _______________________________________________
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> Crowbar@dell.com<mailto:Crowbar@dell.com>
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> For more information: http://crowbar.github.com/

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--
Judd Maltin
T: 917-882-1270
F: 501-694-7809
what could possibly go wrong?

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