The World's Largest Data Centers 87
1sockchuck writes "It seems data centers are getting bigger all the time. Who has the world's largest server farm? Data Center Knowledge has put together a list of 10 huge data centers, all between 400,000 and 1.1 million square feet. The story highlights the trend toward ever-bigger data centers, such as the Vegas SuperNAP and Microsoft's container data center, as well as established behemoths like the NAP of the Americas in Miami and Lakeside Technology Center in Chicago."
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Next up: How to rice your data center with NOS and Team Jetspeed decals!
Re:And only 8 months behind schedule (Score:4, Funny)
I'll take Guys who post in the wrong thread for $500, please Alex.
"This guy more than likely uses firefox and has at least two tabs open on slashdot." /hits buzzer
"Lucas123."
"Correct!"
"I'll take Guys who post in the wrong thread for $600, please Alex."
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"Who is Lucas123?" There fixed that for you.
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Oh, ones day I'll get you, Trebec! /shakes fist angrily.
Re:And only 8 months behind schedule (Score:4, Funny)
Yeah, I mean why would you leave Activision in the first place? It's not like EA is any better.
Re:And only 8 months behind schedule (Score:4, Funny)
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Opera mini is one thing, but let me know when they finally approve Firefox. In the meantime, I'll stick with Safari.
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I have, on only one occasion clicked on a /. article and it has attached the wrong comments. I tried to find out why, but when I refreshed it fixed itself...crazy stuff. It happens.
Gaze and be amazed at the sights and the strength (Score:4, Funny)
I love networking and datacenters... it seems very exciting to me to think about designing and maintaining a datacenter like that.
This [slashdot.org] was one of the most exciting threads I've ever read on Slashdot, if that tells you anything.
Re:Gaze and be amazed at the sights and the streng (Score:4, Funny)
You really need to get laid.
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You really need to get laid.
I really need to get laid to but you know what? I have servers in the NAP of the Americas. w00t!!! pwn3d!!! I loves it!!! who needs women anyways?
Hmm (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Hmm (Score:5, Funny)
They have 750 server farms vying for 11th.
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Preach on brother Beavis.
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That's because you can do more with less hardware running Linux than Windows. And since Linux doesn't BSOD redundancy is not as critical an issue.
So if you think this is true, why don't you make a proposal to MSFT's IT dept as a way to save them millions of dollars in hardware/power/cooling by deploying Linux.
Please give us an update after you have made your proposal.
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'Cause Windows 2008 Server core has SO MUCH overhead...
Exchange Server is extremely reliable and very scalable...there are very few products that are open source and/or free that have the same level of usability, stability and features.
I have both Unix and Windows servers and both have had very few problems. I think some of the misconceptions about Microsoft's products being prone to problems have more to do with the user than the software. It is possible that anyone who can download a torrent can walk thro
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"Should we spec a 2nd server, you know, for HA?"
"Nah, it'll be running Linux; it never crashes and generates a magical aura that prevents hardware failures"
Re:Hmm (Score:4, Insightful)
Oh come on. Put the crack pipe down.
Every OS has its quirks. Windows has bluescreens, Unix has kernel panics. And even if you put together a hardware/OS combination that isn't particularly vulnerable to such things, you've still got application software to deal with.
When you categorically must have the system as a whole working, when "oh dear that server just died horribly" is not allowed to cause the system as a whole to come crashing down, redundancy is very much a critical issue - I don't care if you're talking about Windows, Linux or VMS.
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The fact of the matter is I can launch an e commerce site or an email server and practically forget about it. With windows exchange server I would experience random failures for no good reason at all. Same with windows server. I spent more time on windows maint, and more money on windows licenses which always had to have a degree of more expensive hardware to perform the same.
I ran a national rad
1.3 million square feet (Score:5, Informative)
Re:1.3 million square feet (Score:4, Funny)
[T]he CEO that said one of the reasons they bought the site was because it had "room for growth".
I too have room for growth in my Command Center, just as soon as I finish clearing out that stack of old magazines where the router and CB Radio are sitting. Hmm. Come to think of it, I need another power strip.
Is A BotNet (Score:5, Funny)
considered to be a "Data Center"?
Yours In Astrakhan,
Kilgore Trout
Ruined my view (Score:3, Funny)
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Well, if you get on another roof, and shoot the dishes down?
Of course “the wind” would be a better excuse. ^^
The 10 (Score:4, Informative)
Since the site is being clobbered and doesn't have a huge datacentre...
10. The SuperNAP, Las Vegas (Switch Communications)
9A and 9B. Microsoft Data Centers in Quincy Washington and San Antonio
8. CH1, Elk Grove Village, Ill. (DuPont Fabros)
7. Phoenix ONE, Phoenix (i/o Data Centers)
6. Microsoft Dublin (Microsoft)
5. Container Data Center, Chicago (Microsoft)
4. NGD Europe, Newport Wales (Next Generation Data)
3. The NAP of the Americas, Miami (Terremark)
2. Metro Technology Center, Atlanta (Quality Technology)
1. 350 East Cermak / Lakeside Technology Center (Digital Realty)
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Three are in Chicago (Score:2)
The most popular location in the top 10 is Chicago, IL, with three of the largest data centers. 350 E. Cermak is across from Chicago's convention center. Elk Grove Village is west of O'Hare Airport.
Why Chicago? It's a central US location. It doesn't get too hot. Power reliability is good. Transportation access is good. Earthquakes, hurricanes, and floods are rare. There are many big, solid industrial buildings available. It's not as depressed as Detroit or Cleveland.
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#1, #5, and #8 in Chicago?
In the 1600s French explorers wrote about finding a location in the center of the new world which would be the most strategic location for controlling shipping by water. Indeed, for many years in the 1800s Chicago was the busiest port in the United States. But the age of the railroad was approaching and Chicago decided it must be the center of that as well. To this day, more than 60% of rail traffic in the United States runs through Chicago. In the 1900s a fast expanding Americ
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You left off "All that Jazz" from that list.
Physician, heal thyself... (Score:3, Funny)
Too bad this wasn't hosted at one of world's 10 biggest data centers. If it had been, the site might have survived the Slashdot effect.
with the cooling costs (Score:4, Insightful)
i would have said that a datacenter in las vegas makes no sense
but of course, i'm forgetting the hoover dam: guaranteed cheap power
which makes sense, because the hoover dam is the only reason las vegas can exist as a city in the first place
so for any of you datacenter builders of the future: look for intersections of traffic flows and hydroelectric dams
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I used to work at a company that had a large one in Utica... they had trouble with blizzards and would have to plan to have a support team snowed in and unable to leave for days at a time.
hey, i love the finger lakes (Score:1, Offtopic)
but the issue is traffic flows. las vegas is situated nicely between denver, los angeles, and all the traffic flowing to the east
but in wester ny, you are off center of the boston/ new york/ washington corridor, and off center of the ny-chicago intartubules
is there fibre along the erie canal? (im a complete idiot on this question). it would make sense after all for a toronto/ montreal chicago/ new york city hub to run something there
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Because nothing is "cheap" unless supply is larger than demand. There's plenty of people around NEW YORK to consume that "cheap" power, to the point it isn't cheap any longer.
In Las Vegas, however, there's a relatively small population, and it's a good distance away from any other population centers which might wish to consume that cheap power...
Additionally, the desert is underrated. Large quantities of
Data Map (Score:2)
Vegas has **huge** internet-tubes. Hoover dam huge. http://www.cogentco.com/img/other/networkmap_large.jpg [cogentco.com] I would assume there are other carriers going through Vegas too.
No meaningful earthquake threat out there. Sure, you'll get the occasional roller from Cali, but that's it. The weather isn't a big issue either. The data center's going to go up in smoke if the cooling quit regardless of where the data center is located.
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I wouldn't be surprised if it has more to do with the gaming laws, every transaction from every slot machine/gambling device needs to be recorded and stored for a long time (over 5 years I think) that makes for a Lot of storage.
dude: (Score:1, Offtopic)
downtown las vegas to the hoover dam is 25 miles
everything else is desert
that's about the entire story
if the dam wasn't built, there would be no las vegas. the building of the dam allowed las vegas to exist
so where does vegas get its electricity (Score:2)
if not the massive hydroelectric dam 25 miles away?
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The one I am most surprised at is Phoenix ONE. Although we are having a very cold year this year (it hasn't even hit 90 yet [32 for those outside the US], and we are already into April), normally cooling costs would be huge. I know they have done some work with chillers to replace air conditioners, but cooling that size space in 115 degree heat (46 Celsius) can't be cheap.
Phoenix does have some advantages, though. Very low earthquake probability, slim chance of flooding, and hurricanes and tornados are thi
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1) Endless cheap green power (geothermal & hydropower).
2) Optimal climate for datacenter cooling.
3) Well educated and motivated workforce Very friendly.
4) With their economy right now, it's a buyer's market.
5) Their submarine cable infrastructure has been growing steadily. Currently served by cables to Europe and North America.
i agree with this (Score:2)
location is really really good between europe/ north america
the cable layers would need thick hulls, but otherwise, yeah: i think iceland is well-suited as an ideal datacenter location of the future, for political reasons even
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I think a solar-thermic power plant, plus hydrogen production for the night, should work nicely, even when there’s nothing but desert in sight.
Bandwidth? (Score:2)
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Even if you are a fan of loud white noise and cold breezes, bringing a girl home would be uh, problematic. The physical access control might not turn her off, but getting comfy on a bench next to a 42u won't impress her.
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I want to know the total storage. These are data centers, and all they are reporting on is the physical size of the building and the power needed. How much data can they store with that space/power? Which is the most efficient in its use of space or electricity per terabyte?
Is Miami a good place for a large data center? (Score:1)
I would think that hurricane damage, flood potential, etc. would be a problem.
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The guys I work with that own a few lanes at the local datacenter work downtown. But the datacenter is out by the airport. They don't go out there that often, it takes
So much for decentralization (Score:2)
The "NAP of the Americas" with 160 networks converging on it, sounds like the opposite of the Internet's original decentralized design. Not that the 7-inch-thick concrete panel walls sound fragile, but hardly impregnable, either. I'm thinking the truckload of glorified fertilizer that demolished the Murrah building would still give it a bad day.
No doubt I was silly to think even a few of these monsters were out of the way in places easier to secure with a chain-link fence and a few cameras that could se
They missed the largest one, it's in Tokyo (Score:2, Informative)
Some more info on the @Tokyo d
Nudes A Poppin'? (Score:1)
Anyone else here more of a perv than a nerd and can only come up with Nudes A Poppin' when trying to remember what NAP means?
terrorist targets? (Score:1)