Page 14 - How Cloud Computing Is Transforming Business and Why You Cant Afford to Be Left Behind
P. 14

INTRODUC TION



                 second story of the building, hardware in a more traditional,
                 raised-floor data center was already humming away.
                     Microsoft’s facility is designed for 300,000 servers, and
                 according to Microsoft’s president of servers and tools, Bob
                 Muglia, as best he knows, it’s the largest data center on earth.
                     A short while before Microsoft opened its doors, Google

                 had opened a window on what had previously been the secret
                 design of its own data centers. A Google camera crew showed
                 an unpretentious-looking technician, possibly a recent high
                 school graduate, mounting a razor scooter and scooting along
                 the warehouse floor to a server unit. He extracted a failed
                 server from the rack and inserted a new server, a unit that ap-
                 peared to be about 3.5 inches thick, with a sheet metal baffle

                 to keep the heat-generating parts separate from the cooler
                 parts of the machine. That’s not how they do it in the enter-
                 prise data center. This is not your father’s data center.
                     Google and Amazon.com pioneered these concepts, and
                 Microsoft and others have picked them up and produced their
                 own implementations. When data centers such as this are built
                 out of what are basically PC parts, with one server cluster con-
                 sisting of thousands of servers, when very-large-scale parallel
                 processing software is applied to the cluster, and when the

                 governing software routes jobs around hardware failures, you
                 have something new, a “cloud” data center. It is a string of 12
                 or more such data centers around the world that powers the
                 marvelous Google search engine. And more are being built
                 next to 2 cents per kilowatt hour sources of hydroelectric
                 energy rather than the 11 cents per kilowatt hour energy that
                 powers the computers on which this book was edited. Energy



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