Microsoft Puts Datacenter In a Barn
aesoteric writes "Microsoft has announced that it will open a new datacenter in Washington State housed in a 'modern' barn-like structure that is 'virtually transparent to ambient outdoor conditions'. It was not the first time Microsoft had toyed with the idea of a datacenter without walls. In September 2008, it successfully ran a stack of HP servers in a tent for seven months, apparently with no failures."
At least it's a stable job.
In September 2008, it successfully ran a stack of HP servers in a tent for seven months, apparently with no failures.
So they weren't actually running microsoft software on those servers?
That would makes sense, as it takes tons of heat to produce cold air, and simply using the existing cold air has a much lower carbon footprint (corporations don't really care, to them it means lower power bills). As for humidity, it should be lower inside the barn than outside, as the heat from the systems will still raise the temperature enough to drop the relative humidity to more reasonable levels. Probably still higher than optimal, but like you said, who cares if you are running cheap enough gear, you would replace it more often anyway.
Reading Wikipedia seems to indicate that it is much drier there than eastern Washington anyway. You could likely balance the humidity with the temperature, ie: if you want lower humidity, you vent less and put up with higher temps within the barn. If it is anything like Spokane, then the main humidity is in the winter, when the air is holding less water to start with and allowing the temp to go up (vent less) will do no harm, while dramatically dropping the humidity. There aren't a lot of places this would work, but this area might just fine.
Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
Yer SQL server crashin'? Lemme have a look at 'er...
Ah! Found it right here... possums! Ya gots possums livin' in yer SNA-box-thingie. Heh... SNA... that always did sound dirty. ANyways, lemme get my plinkin' rifle and my coon dog Skeeter, we'll git yer back up and runnin'!
Seein' as I'll be in there anyways, y'all want a RAM upgrade?
Everybody gets what the majority deserves.
I seem to recall a business plan back in the late 1990's to do something similar adjacent to the alaska pipeline; complete with a refinery.
The argument was that it would have
* Free airconditioning with the clean dry cold alaska air.
* Unparalleled physical security - with miles of visibility in all directions.
* A well-protected network (if they could run their lines along the well-defended pipeline)
* Unlimited backup-generator fuel (tapped directly into the pipeline)
I seem to recall they raised funds. Wonder what happened to them.