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div class="rxbodyfield"p page="1" class="ArticleBody"a target="_blank"
href="http://www.networkworld.com/subnets/microsoft/"Microsoft/a has seen the future of the
datacenter, and oddly enough it#39;s missing a roof./pp align="right"a
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width="336" height="280" border="0" alt="" align="right"//a/pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"The
company#39;s future a target="_blank"
href="http://www.networkworld.com/news/2008/120408-gartner-top-10-disruptive-technologies.html?informamp;ap1=rcb"datacenter
design/a, which will be its de facto standard in five years, is a cross between an electrical
switching station, an RV-park and the closing quot;warehousequot; scene from the 1981 film
emRaiders of the Lost Ark/em ./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"b[ Stay ahead of advances in
technology with InfoWorld#39;s a href="http://weblog.innfoworld.com/yager/?source=fssr"Ahead of the
Curve blog/a and a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/newsletter/subscribe.html?source=fssr"newsletter/a. ]/b/pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"The company envisions a set of prefabricated containers the size of a
semi-trailer filled with as many as 2,000 preconfigured servers. The containers can be parked next
to and plugged into pre-built mechanical, electrical, cooling and security components. In essence,
it is a giant collection of a target="_blank"
href="http://www.networkworld.com/news/tech/2008/082708-tech-update.html"boxes and pluggable
components/a that can grow and shrink based on need./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"The container
portion of the idea is nothing revolutionary. Microsoft is installing them in its Chicago
datacenter. a href="http://www.networkworld.com/news/financial/sun.html"Sun/a introduced a server
container called Project Blackbox in 2006 and a target="_blank"
href="http://www.networkworld.com/subnets/google/"Google/a received a patent in 2007 on its
quot;mobile datacenterquot; stored in a standard shipping container, which unlike Sun#39;s
Blackbox, could be clustered in the same modular fashion that Microsoft is proposing./pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"The container idea also has its a target="_blank"
href="http://www.networkworld.com/news/2008/050908-why-microsofts-approach-to-data.html"critics/a
who say they are rife with electrical and mechanical concerns, have power management and cooling
issues, present a single point of failure, and are susceptible to damage during shipping./pp
page="1" class="ArticleBody"Microsoft, however, is not just talking about containers, but the
configuration of the entire datacenter./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"The company this week
unveiled what it is calling its quot;Generation 4 Modular Data Centerquot; plan, a blueprint that
will define its cloud datacenter infrastructure in the next five years./pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"The datacenters have four walls and a sophisticated perimeter security system,
but are open to the elements as they lack a roof. Trucks wheel the boxes into the enclosure where
they are connected to power/cooling stations before being brought online./pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"It#39;s a bold plan to drive industry thinking about how to construct and
operate datacenters in a world of capacity spikes, real-time needs for computing power and
expanding green initiatives./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"quot;We believe it is one of the most
revolutionary changes to happen to datacenters in the last 30 years,quot; said Michael Manos,
general manager of global foundation services for Microsoft, in his blog introducing Microsoft#39;s
Generation 4 plan./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"emBusinessWeek/em reported last month that
Microsoft said it was going to quot;reinvent the infrastructure of our industryquot; by building
some 20 datacenters that can carry a price tag as much as $1 billion apiece./pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"quot;In short, we are striving to bring Henry Ford#39;s Model T factory to the
datacenter,quot; Manos said. quot;In our design process, we questioned everything. You may notice
there is no roof and some might be uncomfortable with this. We explored the need of one and
throughout our research we got some surprising (positive) results that showed one wasn#39;t
needed.quot;/pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"Microsoft says all the pieces needed to construct the
datacenter would be built off-site and assembled once they arrived at the datacenter location, much
the way planes, cars, and computers are built today. The company says the process would mean a
target="_blank"
href="http://www.networkworld.com/news/2008/062608-microsoft-sees-little-data-centers.html"less
time and money/a to erect a new datacenter. #160;/pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"And Microsoft
expects efficiencies in power usage that blow away even the best-rated facilities today based on
PUE (power usage effectiveness), a metric developed by The Green Grid and used to determine the
energy efficiency of a datacenter./pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"quot;A key driver is our goal to
achieve an average PUE at or below 1.125 by 2012 across our datacenters,quot; Manos said on his
blog./pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"Achieving such a low PUE average would be a breakthrough given
that the typical datacenter has an average PUE of 2.5, according to the Uptime Institute. The
Institute says that a best-case scenario today could produce a 1.6 PUE average if the datacenter is
using the most efficient equipment and best practices./pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"Manos added:
quot;More than that, we are on a mission to reduce the overall amount of copper and water used in
these facilities.quot;/pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"Operationally, the datacenter would offer
different classes of service defined to meet the needs of applications and services deployed and to
create cost efficiencies. The classes include ala carte options, such as uninterruptible power
supplies and backup generators, temperature controls, and redundancy./pp page="2"
class="ArticleBody"Microsoft says the varying configurations will drive engineering innovations
that will lower operational costs for applications./pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"And to show that
Microsoft is aiming toward industry interoperability the datacenter#39;s containers would have
common interfaces so others can plug their wares into them including computer vendors, UPS vendors,
and generator vendors./pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"Manos admits that a 2005 memo written to
Microsoft employees by now chief software architect Ray Ozzie was the trigger for thinking about
how Microsoft would evolve deeper into an operations company rather than a provider of packaged
software./pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"What grew out of that were Generation 2 facilities, now
operating in Quincy, Wash., and San Antonio, Texas, which took into account sustainability, energy
efficiency, and total cost of operations./pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"Generation 3 facilities,
which are represented by Microsoft#39;s mammoth datacenter in Chicago, feature containers and a
modular design./pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"Microsoft has posted a short a target="_blank"
href="http://video.msn.com/video.aspx?mkt=en-usamp;vid=b4d189d3-19bd-42b3-85d7-6ca46d97fe40"video/a
to show how its Generation 4 datacenters would be constructed and how they would operate./pp
page="2" class="ArticleBody"emNetwork World is an InfoWorld affiliate/em/p/divbr style=clear:
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