Blizzard Offers Look Inside WoW At GDC
Yesterday morning at GDC Austin, Blizzard's J. Allen Brack and Frank Pearce took to the stage to finally give a peek inside the inner workings of World of Warcraft. Tipping the scales at around 4,600 people utilizing 20,000 computer systems and 1.3 petabytes of storage, Blizzard has created a raging behemoth. The Online Network services group alone has "data centers from Texas to Seoul, and monitor over 13,250 server blades, 75,000 cpu cores, and 112.5 terabytes of blade RAM. [Pearce] points out the picture of the GNOC (Global Network Operations Center) in their slideshow, a data core that even has televisions tuned to the weather stations. They use those to ensure that conditions of the data center are up to their standards; with only a staff of 68 people they ensure connectivity across the globe for the numerous WoW servers."
Massive online game requires massive ammount of servers, bandwidth and people to maintain.....
oogly boogly!
Additional instances cannot be launched.
I think he may mean that in countries like Russia and China the subscription rate is tremendously lower due to the local currency.
Except ASIA is a large portion of the subscriber base (the 10 million number they like to quote a lot)and doesn't pay much per month at all. Blizzard licenses the game to ISPs and other partners that resell the game service as part of their offerings.
So that part of it IS known, and you should factor that into your equations. Monthly income off WoW is nowhere near $120 million.
With currency exchange rates fluctuating so frequently, Blizzard has to allow for the possibility that in Russia, World of Warcraft subscribes to you.
There are no karma whores, only moderation johns
I was alarmed when I was searching for a new bank that the major banks do not offer authenticators or usb dongles to use for online banking for normal consumers. Why can I protect my WoW account better than my bank account?
Apparently the programmer's boss is also a programmer, the artists boss an artist and they are expected to work together. So so SOOOO much better than the bureaucrats most of us get stuck with.
"In Soviet Russia, the government controls the corporations."
is also pretty good, imho.