Entries tagged with “utility computing” from O'Reilly Radar
Data Center Power Efficiency
by Jesse Robbins | @jesserobbins | comments: 8
James Hamilton is one of the smartest and most accomplished engineers I know. He now leads Microsoft's Data Center Futures Team, and has been pushing the opportunities in data center efficiency and internet scale services both inside & outside Microsoft. His most recent post explores misconceptions about the Cost of Power in Large-Scale Data Centers:
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I’m not sure how many times I’ve read or been told that power is the number one cost in a modern mega-data center, but it has been a frequent refrain. And, like many stories that get told and retold, there is an element of truth to the it. Power is absolutely the fastest growing operational costs of a high-scale service. Except for server hardware costs, power and costs functionally related to power usually do dominate.
However, it turns out that power alone itself isn’t anywhere close to the most significant a cost. Let’s look at this more deeply. If you amortize power distribution and cooling systems infrastructure over 15 years and amortize server costs over 3 years, you can get a fair comparative picture of how server costs compare to infrastructure (power distribution and cooling). But how to compare the capital costs of server, and power and cooling infrastructure with that monthly bill for power?
The approach I took is to convert everything into a monthly charge. [...]
tags: cloud computing, energy, james hamilton, microsoft, operations, performance, platforms, utilities, utility computing, velocity, velocity09, web2.0
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Sprint blocking Cogent network traffic...
by Jesse Robbins | @jesserobbins | comments: 3
It appears that Sprint has stopped routing traffic (called "depeering") from Cogent as a result of some sort of legal dispute. Sprint customers cannot reach Cogent customers, and vice versa. The effect is similar to what would happen if Sprint were to block voice phonecalls to AT&T customers.
Here's a graph that shows the outage, courtesy of Keynote :

Rich Miller at DataCenterKnowledge has a great summary of the issues behind the incident, which has happened with Cogent before. Rich says:
At the heart of it, peering disputes are really loud business negotiations, and angry customers can be used as leverage by either side. This one will end as they always do, with one side agreeing to pay up or manage their traffic differently.
I think this is particularly Radar-worthy because it provides an example of the complex issues around Net Neutrality . In this case customers are harmed and most (especially Sprint wireless customers) will have no immediate recourse.
tags: cloud computing, cogent, disruption, innovation, internet policy, network neutrality, operations, sprint, utilities, utility computing, webops
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Video of Rich Wolski's EUCALYPTUS talk at Velocity
by Jesse Robbins | @jesserobbins | comments: 1
Rich Wolski gave a truly impressive talk at Velocity about an open-source software infrastructure for cloud computing called EUCALYPTUS . The API is compatible with Amazon's EC2 interface, and the underlying infrastructure is designed to support multiple client-side interfaces. EUCALYPTUS is implemented using commonly-available Linux tools and basic Web-service technologies making it easy to install and maintain. Watch and learn...
You can see more videos from Velocity on Blip.tv.
tags: cloud computing, ec2, movers and shakers, open source, operations, platform plays, science, utility computing, velocity, velocity08, videos, web 2.0
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