Huge Data Center Going Up In Sin City 88
pacopico writes "The Register has a report on an intriguing Las Vegas-based company which is building one of the world's largest data centers called the SuperNAP. The company — Switch Communications — claims it will be the most densely packed and power efficient data center ever built. The report notes, 'Legend has it that the company managed to acquire what was once meant to be Enron's broadband trading hub for a song. This gave Switch access to more than twenty of the primary carrier backbones in a single location. Switch tied this vast network to existing data center hosting facilities and attracted military clients, among others, to its Las Vegas shop.'"
Firewall??? (Score:1, Funny)
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Maybe the fiber hub has built in packet shredders.
security issues (Score:1, Funny)
why not? (Score:2, Funny)
Wow. (Score:2)
Heat (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Heat (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Heat (Score:5, Interesting)
Tell that to the indians (Score:5, Insightful)
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Now I've seen everything.
Re:Heat (Score:5, Interesting)
The skylines lit up at dead of night, the air-conditioning systems
cooling empty hotels in the desert and artificial light in the middle
of the day all have something both demented and admirable about them.
The mindless luxury of a rich civilization, and yet of a civilization
perhaps as scared to see the lights go out as was the hunter in his
primitive night. (Jean Baudrillard)
Re:Heat (Score:4, Insightful)
I agree. Los Angeles should be abandoned and you can give us folks upstream all that water and power back.
But to make my point a little more seriously, every single city in the country is by nature uninhabitable for the number of people we have there. That's just as true for New York, Chicago, and LA as for Las Vegas and Phoenix. Southern Nevada has a tiny fraction of the population of Southern California, and uses a proportionately small amount of the water and power from the Colorado River. So why is it Las Vegas that gets criticized?
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Average low in LA in December: 50
Annual average precipitation in LA: 14 inches
Average high in Vegas in July: 104.1
Average low in Vegas in December: 36.6
Annual average precipitation in Vegas: 4.5 inches
The reason Vegas gets criticized more than other desert cities is that it sells itself as a place without a culture, an artificial paradise without the need for traditional morals, where you don't have to worry about anything... and it bathes in that sentiment. How long could a s
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Re:Heat (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Heat (Score:5, Informative)
I thought about heat, cooling, power, all the standard data center stuff, then I thought. Well, Isn't Vegas a great place for solar? Not a mention of it in the article. It mentions needing 3 million gallons of water a day (not a commodity in the desert), they also say that the building was left over from the Enron fiasco.
I don't know, to me something does not seem to add up here. They are advertising 3x the power density of the typical data center (1500 Watts/sq ft vs 500), and all that. Fortune 100 companies as companies, all that, but also the stuff where they get database feeds from databases that nobody knows about, and that they have a display that will immediately update whenever someone mentions the word bomb on an airplane (are airplanes wired that well now?).
To me, the article leaves many more questions than answers. Something seems fishy with this, but maybe my tin foil hat is on too tightly today.
Re:Heat (Score:5, Insightful)
On top of that the desert is actually a pretty frigging cold place to be at night - which they again can use to their advantage. They talk about 4 different options for cooling what works in different types of conditions during the day/night.
Theres nothing fishy about it - its all science.
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OTOH, Nevada only uses a fraction of the damn, which means that if Las Vegas starts using more power, it might mean that other regions, which are growing also, might be without power. Likewise, the entire region essentially shares the same water, including mexico, and the area is already on the verge of a water war. This at a
Proximity to California Effect (Score:4, Insightful)
California is basically out of electricity capacity, has earthquakes, and land and taxes are expensive, so Nevada is not only an economy unto itself, but a nearby tax haven. No coincidence that Las Vegas and Reno, the only two cities of any size in NV, are right across the border.
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Will there be a lot of web based gameing set up hear at a later time when the laws change?
Re:Heat (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Heat (Score:4, Informative)
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Back when the Hoover-dam was build, Las Vegas was a small worker town. The mayor back then didnt want to sign up for it, believing that LasVegas would never grow enough to need it.
Now they get soem of their electricity form the dam, but only a small fraction.
The reason why its so big, and always lit up, etc, is gambling. And the fact that 50 million or so people go there per year to spend money.
Who cares about the electricity bill if you also pay a billion for a new hotel?
Re:Heat (Score:5, Interesting)
I do not understand why these mega data centers are mostly situated in hot areas. Not only is 1500 watts per square foot a lot of electricity, it takes a lot of cooling to counter the wattage.
And Hoover Dam, last time I saw it was near idle only running one turbine and the lake water was low.
It makes more sense to pick a location like Revelstoke BC. Near the Mica Dam [wikipedia.org]. I have reasons:
Ya, I know I am dreaming. Would be nice to drive 5-10 miles from work on a open not crowded highway to the boat launch on the way home. Ski-do in the winters. Maybe catch a Dolly Varden or Kokanee salmon. Maybe call it Google City, BC -- ah dreaming.
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Pretty cold all year round. And for further power needs, just hook into some hydroelectric or geothermal niftiness.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geothermal_power_in_Iceland [wikipedia.org]
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Sure, our summers are warm too (max 110 degF for less than a week), but our power is also ridiculously cheap. Quite a bit of it is piped/lined to California, and we're still settling cases after Enron's fiasco.
In addition, we've got a nice fiber pipe that already runs through the area, with three local PUDs [wikipedia.org] that have quite a lot of fiber-to-the-home available in
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SuperNAP? (Score:1, Funny)
Gratuitous Enron Joke... (Score:5, Funny)
-- Jay Leno
Switch Communications ? (Score:2)
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Who else thought of a new game... (Score:5, Funny)
There's big betting bucks here!
Switch Does Have Some Good Facilities (Score:5, Informative)
I didn't get too far into the peering side of things, but I remember them talking up the amount of fiber that runs through the Las Vegas valley.
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It's a little early in the morning for me - but there just has to be joke in here somewhere.
Los Vegas.
Due Diligence.
Hooker's and Blackjack?
Likely no sharks... No that's not right ....
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Next George Clooney Movie: (Score:2, Funny)
this facility is not their property (Score:2, Interesting)
The only worse outcome would be to find out that those with insider information on Enron (former executives, management, etc.), fully aware of how this asset would be sold off, were found to be the new "owners".
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I bet 20 on the bald guy from Arkansas with bad teeth.
Whadya mean they all look the same ?
Actually yah, it is their property (Score:3, Informative)
Page 1: "Legend has it that the company managed to acquire what was once meant to be Enron's broadband trading hub for a song."
Page 3: "Enron had already built a lot of the infrastructure needed for its facility and brought the major carriers on board just as its business started to collapse. So, the broadband center went up for sale.
"We were the only ones that bid on it," Roy said. "It should have been the $200bn companies that owned it. We got it for a Cinderella story type of figure."
If the faci
Not the greatest area... (Score:1, Informative)
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3 Million gallons of Water (Score:2)
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Still, that is a huge amount of water storage even to run for a single day. Usually we try to have 72 hours of water storage on-site. You can use the dry coolers (or air cooled chillers), but the efficiency goes to hell in the Las Vegas climate.
For a more human sc
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You could also drop that down by half most of the year if you use the cooling towers as dry coolers at night.
Small nitpick here, you mean Water-Side Economizer, not dry cooler. There is no way to use a cooling tower as a dry cooler since the condenser water is exposed to the atmosphere and thus subject to evaporation. A dry cooler, on the other hand, circulates a fluid through sealed coils which in turn have air forced across them to encourage heat exchange. The ability to use a water-side economizer would definitely be dependent on outdoor temperature.
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This type of system is really interesting when you look at optimizing power and water usage dynamically based on rates, approach, and plant efficiency, as there is no loss in reliability. (just cost...)
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Or just not enough capacity as associated with the evaporative plant? Because the freeze-and-exchange method could use mostly the same water for a good long time.
they could have only 10 years to get self powered (Score:5, Interesting)
So these people may have a huge data center but they might want either a 10 year exit strategy or start building their own solar and/or wind power generation systems to sustain their operation.
LoB
Re:they could have only 10 years to get self power (Score:2)
Re:they could have only 10 years to get self power (Score:1)
talk about US centric.... (Score:1, Offtopic)
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Get your tickets now! (Score:1)
Stupid cooling strategy (Score:4, Interesting)
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Now, if keeping that pool with water is wasteful or not is another question, but not one that is made worse by the data center's use of water.
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There are a lot of neat ways to provide cooling, but unless you get heat directly off the chip to a coolant, it isn't easy to do anything but evaporative cooling in the desert... at least not without a huge thermal mass.
Virtual Vegas Machine (Score:5, Interesting)
A virtual machine that avatars could program, which converts or interprets the avatars' "programming" actions into "real" code that runs in SecondLife's real datacenters.
I think such a service could crank out quite a few LindenDollars.
Oh THAT sin city (Score:2)
Sweet! (Score:1)
How long before water shortages affect Las Vegas? (Score:1)