Amazon: a Single Disaster Made Us Rethink Our Cloud Supply Chain (datacenterfrontier.com) 37
1sockchuck writes: At this week's AWS re:Invent conference, Amazon Web Services introduced new features and looked ahead to a future in which enterprise computing shifts to the cloud. But AWS also looked back at how a disaster reshaped its supply chain. In 2011, an unusually heavy monsoon season led to massive flooding in Thailand, which at the time manufactured nearly half of the world's supply of hard disk drives (HDDs). Prices soared and shortages developed, and Amazon's usual vendors were unable to deliver the volume the company sought to support its fast-growing cloud computing platform. "When a single flood hits half the manufacturing supply, and you don't have a direct relationship with suppliers, it turns out to be hard to get what you need," said AWS executive Jerry Hunter. So AWS executives jumped on a plane, flew to Thailand, and began building direct relationships that would support their shift to company-built hardware.
Monsoon season affecting The Cloud? (Score:5, Funny)
Seems ironic.
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Someone should write a song about it.
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Had my own personal cloud last night. It's wild what a tin of baked beans will produce. Careful with those matches.
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Well, being Slashdot, people will use the initialism in their comments, and others will ask what it means, so having it spelled out isn't a problem. It's much better than the summaries that use an initialism without explaining it. There have been many that did that, often with much more obscure references.
Of course, the real answer is that in most cases the summaries are cut-and-paste copies from the article.
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Intel (Score:3)
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The dumb terminals of yesteryear. That which is old is new again, and all that. I kind of liked the idea of thin clients then and I still do - they serve a function and fill a niche. With much of what we do being 'in the cloud' these days, well, it's a lot like the terminals of yesterday.
Personally, at this moment, I'm in west New York. My home is in N.W. Maine. I am using my laptop to connect to my home via VNC through the hotel's wireless. It gets worse... On the home machine I have GhostBSD running, as a
And nothing changed (Score:4, Informative)
So they flew to Thailand and cut out the middle man. Besides a small savings on their purchases, the next monsoon they'll still be without their drives. The problem wasn't that the distributors were piling up stocks, it's that they were physically unable to manufacture them.
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When I read it, it looked like they were saying that they bought themselves privilege. They're able to buy enough volume to be a priority. I'm not sure that this is special, unique in any way, or signifies anything other than a slow news day or an example of a poorly performed article selection.
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Yeah.. re-thinking would be finding a way to source their storage needs that was less geographically centralized.
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What's funny is that I've heard from people inside one of the big drive manufacturers (mid-level management based in Thailand) that production capacity wasn't really impacted by the flooding at all. They said it was more of a psychological and market-reaction storm than anything else.
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You'd think the market would have responded with more .22LR ammo, but it hasn't. It suggests something more sinister than Obama's agenda, which was the original reason given for the run on ammo. I think ammo manufacturers have taken a lesson from Enron and gasoline refiners in California and engineered themselves a little shortage to drive up prices.
Me no think so. I think it is emotion-driven demand that constantly clears up the aisles off any box with 22LR (and to a lesser degree, 38SP, regular load or +P). For as much as guns are popular in this country, we have a shitty supply-chain. To make it worse, you cannot easily reload 22LR, which makes scarcity even worse. With almost every other ammo, you can reload your own (either as a hobby, to weather shortages or, if you are a crazy lunatic, preparing for the Obama/UN/Jade Helm apocalypse.)
With 22L
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I buy most of my ammo from Jack's Trading Post, down in Farmington, and do a lot of plinking. In fact, the sidearm I have with me is "just" a Mark II. I've never seen them completely run out of .22LR and I've even ordered whole cases of the stuff - even after Obama's election. I keep hearing people say there's a shortage and whatnot but I've not really seen much in the way of this shortage. I am not sure where the discrepancy lies.
It's obviously true that some people are experiencing shortages but, even whe
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I buy most of my ammo from Jack's Trading Post, down in Farmington, and do a lot of plinking. In fact, the sidearm I have with me is "just" a Mark II. I've never seen them completely run out of .22LR and I've even ordered whole cases of the stuff - even after Obama's election. I keep hearing people say there's a shortage and whatnot but I've not really seen much in the way of this shortage. I am not sure where the discrepancy lies.
It's obviously true that some people are experiencing shortages but, even when it was on the news and heavily covered, I didn't have any real problem with any shortages. There was about a month where the stock was pretty low on the shelves. Being the goober that I am, I already had plenty of my own stock so I didn't worry about it and just didn't buy any while the stock was that low.
That was for a period of maybe a month and only during the peak of the news cycle. So, while I saw it, it was a limited scope and didn't really last long and I've not noticed it since. It's not like I live in an area where we don't have a lot of enthusiasts. They're a pretty small store so it's not like they have special ties with the manufacturers or anything.
I must also admit that I've not asked other people in real life about it. I've not asked the owner for more information about it. I have no idea what their volume is (they're often pretty busy) nor do I know about their supply chain. I can only share that none of this has really impacted me. During the one month where there were only a few boxes on the shelves, I simply skipped buying any. It's not like I was in danger of running out or anything.
Interesting. The supply/drain could be location specific. I'm in South Florida (and Florida is as gun-land as it goes.) I try not order online unless I'm buying in bulk. I'm trying to find just two boxes of 22LR CCI for my NAA, but every time I go to Walmart they have none (plenty of 9mm, though.) And the gun stores when they carry they charge more than what it should be (supply and demand I guess.)
But during the last election, Jesus Christ, I couldn't find any 38SP or 22LR unless in bulk. Single boxes wh
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LOL I'm not home or I'd offer to send you some. I'm over in Buffalo. I've got 500 + 30 I guess - 3 magazines w/10 rounds each - 0 in the chamber, rounds on me, it's just easier to pack a brick. I have property in PCB and will be down that way before I'm done. I don't think I've enough to help you out. If I were home I'd offer to ship you some. I've got cases of it. I've easily got a couple hundred boxes. And no, no... Much of it is probably from before the rush. I just almost always buy a couple of boxes wh
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The problem wasn't that the distributors were piling up stocks, it's that they were physically unable to manufacture them.
Nope, the problem was that Amazon couldn't get ahold of the first ones manufactured when they did get going again. Timing matters.
You build relationships to call in favors. The minor price savings of "no middle-man" was just a side-effect.
I know what they could have done (Score:1)
They could have just bought the drives from Amazon.
Right?
Worthless article (Score:2)