As Cloud Growth Booms, Server Farms Get Super-Sized
1sockchuck writes: Internet titans are concentrating massive amounts of computing power in regional cloud campuses housing multiple data centers. These huge data hubs, often in rural communities, enable companies to rapidly add server capacity and electric power amid rapid growth of cloud hosting and social sharing. As this growth continues, we'll see more of these cloud campuses, and they'll be bigger than the ones we see today. Some examples from this month: Google filed plans for a mammoth 800,000 square foot data center near Atlanta, Equinix announced 1 million square feet of new data centers on its campus in Silicon Valley, and Facebook began work on a $1 billion server farm in Texas that will span 750,000 square feet.
Texas? Georgia? Not exactly ideal for cooling costs. What happened to the green data center movement; put it in North Dakota and all the server cooling can be handled by a vent coming in from the outside.
Too bad datacenters don't bring jobs commensurate with their size and spending. Once the construction is done, it doesn't take many people to run a modern lights-out datacenter.
It's certainly possible that someone attempting a rapid expansion could butt up against the limits of the location; but the handy thing about fiber is that the cost per strand drops pretty dramatically as you run more of it to the same place. The actual fiber certainly isn't free; but the necessary rights of way, support/protection for the cable, labor for installation, etc. cost much the same until you get to some impractically gigantic bundle. It may be necessary to make upgrades; but if a location is already well served enough to start building a datacenter, it's a good bet that adding the necessary capacity there will be cheaper than dealing with more, smaller, links to more locations.
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On the other hand, you are effectively donating all your data to some third party knowing that they will be mining it for information to sell, and with little more than a piece of paper to assure you can get it back.
http://lmgtfy.com/?q=800%2C000...
Politicians welcome them as shining symbols of the new economy
Datacenters are the silver surfer of economies. Ive worked for large hosting companies, and we once broke ground on a new datacenter in rural virginia. I was tasked with arriving on site to oversee bringing it online. i spent most of my time taking pictures with the mayor, and giving tours to school children. The reality I had to explain to parents and kids is this:
1. water: we drilled our own well, so you wont get a dime form us for cracs. even the urinals flushed with our supply.
2. power: Your politician sold you down the river, as we dont pay taxes on this for a long time. all our lighting inside is solar.
3. Jobs: No. you dont understand. Once I leave, no one goes in or out for six months or so. Emerson power flies their technicians from Los Angeles or a regional hub to our datacenter as part of our agreement. we intentionally ensure your local HVAC company doesnt get the chance to screw this up. we manage and monitor security centrally from los angeles. generators are tested remotely, and if we need new servers we send our teams from LA to rack and power them. we dont need people to change the bulbs, we dont need people to clean the floors, we dont need people to wash the nonexistent windows. Enjoy your poverty.
4. General Contractors: your rural contractors arent qualified to build a datacenter, and probably never will be. We brought our own engineers and foremen to subcontract to your lowest bidder. they will be watched like a hawk. We didnt even allow the subcontractors to add their logo or contact information to substation equipment or even add a logo on the fence.
Good people go to bed earlier.
Then a lot of people/companies are going to hightail it back to local data centers. It's just a matter of time. Surprised it hasn't happened yet.
For internet-only companies, the cloud makes a lot of sense, but for a more old-school company it's just too much of a risk that too many are taking.
Some companies will be forced out of business the first long term cloud stoppage occurs, or even worse the first long term internet outage. Their people cannot do any work at all, cause they shipped it all off to the cloud, then the business cannot function. They are really going to be kicking themselves once they realize that all the money they thought they saved by using the cloud will be the thing that puts them out of business.
The cloud is still basically a v1.0 product. Too new to base an entire company's operations on until a few massive security breaches or loss of services occur.
Don't they call that "thunder"?
They can take my LifeAlert pendant when they pry it from my cold dead fingers.
So much for saving the world using CFL bulbs.
New datacenters are generally built on top of new fiber construction. The point is to remix signal every 100km on the fiber for the telco. So a bigger center just means they lay slightly more fiber when they first lay it/
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Stupid AC. Amazon Web Services and Windows Live are opening data centers as fast as they can pour concrete (literally). The security infrastructure that I help oversee at a major cloud provider has tripled in two years.
"Think about how stupid the average person is. Now, realise that half of them are dumber than that." - George Carlin