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Data Center Flood Captured By Security Cam

miller60 writes "Torrential rains last week in Istanbul led to a flood that overwhelmed a data center for Vodafone. The event was captured on the data center security cameras, which shows waters rising and then raging through the security area before flooding the raised-floor equipment area."

8 of 66 comments (clear)

  1. Now featureing by TornCityVenz · · Score: 2, Funny

    Vodaphone Istanbul now features water cooled servers!

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    I Need someone to rebuild a Digitech Digital Delay pedal for me....for me...for me...for me.
  2. It's funny 'cause... by BeneathTheVeil · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "voda" means water in a few languages.

  3. Ooozing sympathy ... by RockDoctor · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Leaving aside that this looks like a pretty anonymous security desk/ reception area which could fron any sort of business, not just a data centre, the important point is, "what a fucking stupid place to build anything".

    You can see from the window that this sort of flooding is nothing to be surprised at. The water is rising slowly and there's little apparent current, which implies that the site is a fair distance from the source of the rising river. Odds on, this is not a "flash flood", but a perfectly normal flood on the flood plain of a river.
    Rivers flood ; they flood onto their flood plains ; floods can be avoided by the simple process of not being where the water ends up. I.E. don't stay on flood plains when there's significant rainfall.

    OK, so people who have brought property on flood plains don't like this because they're going to lose money ; a lot of money. But that's their own fault for being so stupid as to invest in property on a flood plain.

    No fucking sympathy at all. Let the stupid bastards drown as they go bankrupt.

    I was on holiday recently in Mallorca, and also looking at photos of other firend's holidays in Spain. Where other people see a nice wide park area running through the middle of a town, with a tiny stream in a broad concrete channel, they see a public park. But I see a flood channel designed to take flash flooding. Same landscape, different perceptions.

    Last month, we had the worst local rainfall for over 30 years (I've only lived here for 26 years). The rain was hammering down solidly for nearly 3 days ; the ignition leads in my car started complaining. And the drains outside my house overflowed ... and the water ran away downhill to cause flooding on the flood plain at the bottom of the hill. Well, that was a really difficult decision for me to make when I was house hunting, and it's paid off time and again already.

    Learn some basic geography ; look at the shape of the landscape determined by the average climate of the last few thousand years. Then apply what you've learned and let someone else suffer the flooding.

    --
    Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
    1. Re:Ooozing sympathy ... by KORfan · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I beg to differ on the current. If you look at the buildup of the water on the door and window supports, it looks like there's at least half a foot of pileup due to water velocity. There are some pulsating waves so you know it's not just head difference between inside and outside. That water appears to be moving a couple of feet per second, especially after the breakthroughs. It's not a seeping flood, they're getting real velocity.

      I don't think I've ever heard of flood water velocity as a measure of distance from channel before, though.

    2. Re:Ooozing sympathy ... by pjtp · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Leaving aside that this looks like a pretty anonymous security desk/ reception area ...

      I take it you didn't watch the entire clip. Jump to near the end and you can see the feed from a different camera. This one covers the actual data centre.

    3. Re:Ooozing sympathy ... by BountyX · · Score: 2, Informative

      I respectfully disagree. This is not a case and their data center was NOT on flood plains. That area of Istanbul is NOT prone to flooding. Furthermore, it was the heaviest rainfall in the last 8 decades. That section of Istanbul is even on top of an elevated slope (compared to the rest of the city). This is primarily a case of outdated infrastructure throughout the city. Istanbul is one of the oldest cities in the world. They still have roman-built brick elevated roads they rely on for water draining. Upgrade the infrastructure you say? Ha, good luck upgrading a massive city of 12 million, three times the size of chicago and ranked the 5th largest city proper in the world. I'm sure the government can afford to replace the massively ancient city infrastructure /sarcasm. I think the real stupidity here was placing the data center one the first story of a building (and in an earthquake zone). Not the same as you make it sound...

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  4. Furniture by kylben · · Score: 2, Funny

    Ikea office furniture floats. Noted for future reference.

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    Insightful and funny are really the same thing, except one has a punch line.
  5. Re:close the door moron by SEWilco · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The building twisting the frame so the glass no longer fit in the frame is probably the reason it fell out. These are not the forces which you're looking for, they are forces much greater, which encompass the water, forces which flow around and through you.