How Peer1 Survived Sandy
Nerval's Lobster writes "When hurricane Sandy knocked out the electricity in lower Manhattan, data-center operator Peer1 took extreme measures to keep its servers humming, assembling a bucket brigade that carried diesel fuel up several flights of stairs. Ted Smith, senior vice president of operations for Peer1, talks about the decisions made as the floodwaters rose and the main generators went offline, as well as the changes his company has made in the aftermath of the storm. He said, 'When the water got to a point that it had flooded the infrastructure and the basement, we were then operating under the reserves the building had on the roof, and our own storage tanks. Literally, at that point we had to do calculations as to how long we could run. And we believed we had enough diesel fuel—between what is in the building, and in our tanks, to about 9 AM the following day. ... You know the bucket brigade—it’s something I’ve never asked the team to do. If you think about what that was at that time, you’re talking about carrying fuel up 17 flights, in total darkness, throughout a whole evening. We had informed our data center manager that we were shutting down, but he kind of took on it himself to say, ‘Not on my watch.’ And he organized himself, got a temporary solution and then more customers jumped in. And at peak I think we had about 30 people helping.'"
From what I hear, based on the StackExchange podcast, and the tweets that went out from SquareSpace and StackExchange during the whole idea is that Peer1 had a complete failure, and it was only due to the hard work of their customers (SE and SquareSpace) that the datacenter was able to remain operational. If your customers have to start carrying buckets of diesel up 17 flights of starirs, you, as a datacenter have failed. Peer1, left to their own devices would have just let the thing shutdown, and apparently head office wasn't aware of how bad things even were.
Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
You do know that diesel pretty much doesn't burn, right? You actually have to try pretty hard to set a puddle of diesel on fire.
Oh hell. I just looked at the picture in TFA. They were carrying it in buckets. Buckets with lids, but not fuel cans. You were right, I was wrong.
None of them can see the clouds; The polished wings don't care.
It also doesn't vaporize at room temperature like gasoline does. A spark can start a gasoline fire, whereas diesel fuel needs to be atomized. Geeks should know this.
Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
When did being utterly devoid of courage and constantly afraid of every single thing under the sun became a virtue?
When it endangers the lives of my customers. Look, I'm all for stories about heroic efforts of uptime, but this company had no disaster plan. They're lucky they're not in the middle of a lawsuit for injury, or worse, wrongful death right now
Also called dyed #2 heating oil or dyed #2 diesel. They add a red dye to the fuel which enables its presence to be detected in on-road vehicle tanks. Some rural gas stations and truck stops sell dyed #2 oil (as well as kerosene) out of a pump right next to the other fuel pumps. The heating oil taxes are much lower than road fuel taxes so its very tempting to put heating fuel in your tank which costs nearly half of what you normally pay. But during roadside inspections they will check the tanks for red fuel. God help you if you get caught, high fines and they may impound your vehicle. In Louisiana they charge you $100 per gallon of vehicle fuel tank capacity, even if they only find a trace. Many trucks have a 50-300 gallon capacity, OUCH! They do however allow you to fill tanks of off road vehicles like site trucks, construction/farm equipment as well as the refrigeration systems on reefer trailers. It just cant be in the tank of a vehicle that normally travels on a public road.
Those look just like the buckets that I get transmission fluid in (from the tractor store). Transmission fluid is a petroleum product, and, in fact, will run a diesel engine just fine. I'd have no issues using those buckets to store/transfer diesel fluid.
Just another ignorant American.