Switch To Build Largest Data Center In the World In Reno 62
An anonymous reader writes: Data center provider Switch is planning to build a huge facility in Reno, Nevada, which it claims will be the largest data center campus in the world once completed. Switch has said that the SuperNap Reno campus will cost $3bn when fully built. The project will include seven data center buildings of the same size, totaling 6.49mn sq. ft.
Cooling (Score:2)
Gonna turn Lake Tahoe into a giant hot tub?
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Talk about "Single Point of Failure" in case something bad happens there - ranging from accident to terrorist action.
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It seems like a bit of a weird choice. Is Reno will positioned in terms of latency to various clusters of expected users? Did they get some sort of 'development ince
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Huh? All of Nevada is well-positioned for sunlight. But as compared to, say, the wilds of Esmeralda County, Reno is a nice place to live. So why not locate a data center there?
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I'm curious as to what drove the choice of location since normally you'd want to sit something like this on as many fibre connections as you can find.
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I bet you $5 that they build empty buildings and just load up everything to amazon web services.
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With Hookers And Blackjack (Score:1)
In fact, forget the datacenter!
Reno?? A little hot, no? (Score:1)
What about the heat? California has already sucked us dry as it is. HELP!!
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Trivial to get enough energy from solar to power air con units.
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For solar Vegas would be a better choice.
Reno is in a valley, the floor doesn't get as much sunlight as it would if the region was flat. An extra hour or so of sunlight might seem trivial but in the long run it would add up.
Another factor is that Reno, Hells, all of Nevada, is HOT in the summer months so cooling during those months will be really expensive. But during the winter it gets near/below freezing most of the time so the cost might average out over the year.
Personally Reno would be the last plac
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You're probably thinking Vegas.
Reno's much further north and closer to the mountains.
Average temperatures are far lower.
Still, as was pointed out, solar power in this area's still a good deal since they see about 40% sunshine throughout the year. There are months when this will be less, but those are also much cooler months of the year, when they can shunt outside air in.
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The idea isn't necessarily for a *complete* offset. But, with enough solar area, they can put a dent in their power bill.
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No, that's 40% out of the total 8760 hours a year.
That's, on average, 9.6 hours of sunlight a day. Longer in the summer, when they really need it for power. Shorter in the winter, when they don't need it as badly.
Its in Reno (Score:2, Funny)
"I'm gonna build my own data center, with blackjack and hookers!"
Wont be nuclear (Score:1)
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Reno, Nevada (Score:1)
The biggest little server farm in the world
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1 ton = 3.5 KW
82000 tons = 290 MW
A refrigeration ton is the power required to melt one ton of ice in one day.
We need metric conversion bots for slashdot.
How sustainable is this ? (Score:1)
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Actually most of the DC jobs are hands on. The remote jobs would be remote no matter where it was built.
Far down the list (Score:2)
Well, that makes an easy target (Score:1)
Re:same (Score:2)
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I see the same thing. In the immortal words of whatshisname, "Something's fucky..."
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I realize that we are in a new age where there are people who like to brag about how they think pans are incredibly sexy, but I don't see why it is important to know that the guy making this data center is a switch.
I think it has something to do with "bi-directional port sharing", if you know what I mean and I think you do.
Funding (Score:2)
And it'll be funded by the NSA, so you know it'll be good!
WARNING - LINK IS POLLUTED (Score:2)
Be careful, the link to "thestack.com" appears to be polluted, and clicking it will attempt to download an 11.6G file.
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Don't worry, it's just Windows 10 trying to download.
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Don't worry, it's just Windows 10 trying to download.
Those sneaky bastards will try anything, won't they?
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http://lmgtfy.com/?q=6.49+mill... [lmgtfy.com]
I'm not clear on how knowing it in square furlongs will help you. I'm not even sure if anyone has ever used square furlongs as a unit of measure. But people who post messages like this don't actually want to know the answer, they just want to be snarky.
TL;DR 14.9 square furlongs, 0.6 km^2
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In my day we used the round ones.
Here are some facts from a former Reno native (Score:2)
There are so many wrong "facts" and conjectures here, I had to log in and correct them. I was born in Reno and raised nearby, and I've been in the area many times, unlike just about all of you.
What is now an industrial park was formerly a ranch, and, despite being in the middle of a mountain range, has enough flat land within to allow all of this building. At the north end of this ranch is the Truckee River, along with runs Interstate-80 (old US Highway 400 and the Southern Pacific Railroad, the first tra