Open Compute Summit, Sold Out, Watch the Livestream if you did not make the trip to San Antonio

The Open Compute Project is having their third summit May 2-3.  It is sold out.

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If you are not already registered you can watch the event on Livestream.

If you can’t attend the summit, watch the keynote on the livestream this Wednesday at 9AM CDT.

Schedule

May 2, 2012
8:00am - 9:00am
Registration
9:00am - 12:00pm
Keynote presentations from Frank Frankovsky and others from the Open Compute Project community
12:00pm - 2:00pm
Lunch and Exhibit Floor
2:00pm - 5:00pm
Technical workshops (round 1), open sessions, and educational sessions
5:00pm - 6:00pm
Travel to party venue
6:00pm - 10:00pm
Open Compute Party


May 3, 2012
9:00am - 12:00pm
Technical workshops (round 2) and open sessions
12:00pm - 2:00pm
Lunch and Exhibit Floor
2:00pm - 3:00pm
Plenary: a synthesis of each workshop and next steps

Open Compute Projects Technical Workshops

Open Rack
Mechanical design and modular power distribution
Storage
New Hardware and building for the 100 year standard
Virtual IO
Pushing the limits of connectivity, software and hardware modularity
Systems Management
Defining open systems management for the enterprise
Datacenter Design
New initiatives; building for different geographies

Additionally, running in parallel to the technical workshops there will be a series of Open Sessions ---these will be a combination of informative sessions educating people on how the OCP has enabled the ecosystem to both adopt and contribute to the technology stack and how to think about web-scale technology design at scale.













Here are the event sponsors.

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


NYTimes covers growth of Nordic countries as home for Green Data Centers

NYtimes covers the growth of Nordic countries as home for Green Data Centers.

Nordic Countries Increasingly Attractive as Sites for Data Centers

The potential growth of the Nordics could canabalize the data centers in other parts of Europe.

“What we are seeing, certainly in the data storage market, is the rise of the Nordics, which may in the future dilute the market share from the traditional centers in Europe,” Keith Inglis, a partner in the Europe, Middle East and Africa data center advisory group at Cushman & Wakefield, said in a statement.

Here is a summary of construciton projects.

Sweden and the other Nordic countries are attempting to chart a different course. In addition to Facebook, which will spend as much as $750 million on the center, Google has built a €200 million, or $265 million, data facility in Hamina, Finland; Verne Global is investing $700 million in its center in Iceland; and Green Mountain Data is building a facility worth 1 billion Norwegian kroner, or $175 million, in Norway.

The Green Data Center angle is referenced.

“Green has become a really important piece,” said Rachel Dines, a senior analyst at Forrester, the research firm. “Not only does it look good and look environmentally conscious and sustainable but it also saves you a lot of money because green means less power, and power is the No. 1 cost of running a data center.”

One interesting part covered is the incentives offered to Facebook.

Though tax breaks were not part of the deal, Sweden provided an investment grant of 103 million kronor to Facebook. That money could have been spent on broadband and other infrastructure that would benefit all companies, said Per Boland, a spokesman for the Green Party in Sweden. “This sets a standard for the future and it could be a very expensive way to attract business to Sweden,” he said.


Greenpeace friends Facebook for Dirty Cloud campaign

Facebook is referenced as a friend of Greenpeace in the Dirty Cloud campaign.

Getting the internet off coal is a big deal. But here's why we can do it:

  • It's innovative: Microsoft, Amazon and Apple are the most cutting-edge companies in the world and they don't want their customers associating their brand with a 19th Century energy source that is poisoning the air and wrecking our climate.

It's practical: technology that uses clean and unlimited energy sources like the sun and the wind are available today at the scale required. Greenpeace is already working with Facebook to make the switch right now and we'd be happy to work with other major tech companies.

Facebook's Infrastructure work in Seattle

Facebook is expanding its presence in Seattle and part of that work is in infrastructure.

The Seattletimes has an article with some details on what Facebook does in Seattle.

Q: Are the folks in Seattle doing infrastructure?

A:Yes they're doing all sorts of projects, but there's a good contingent of folks here doing infrastructure software. Many of the tools we use to manage and run the site are built here.

Q: Will you offer those tools?

A: We do, to the open-source community. A number of the projects we've built, we open-sourced. Actually much of our infrastructure — much more so than many of our competitors — is open-sourced.

We actually open-sourced the designs of our advanced datacenters. We built one of the world's most efficient datacenters not too far away from here — in Prineville, Ore. — and you can go online and download the CAD files for that building.

So if you want to build one just like it, we've got all the specs you need.

Q: Are you ever going to commercialize that stuff — and sell, instead of share it?

A: No, I think we want to see innovation in that part of the industry. We've got a great set of engineers and we can build more value by making the site faster and run better and getting more users to be happy with it. Who knows what we'll do in the future, but not any immediate plans for that.

Q: Does Seattle have special cluster infrastructure expertise or is it spread around the San Francisco Bay Area as well?

A: I think what Seattle has is a critical mass density of engineers. It's cool to be an engineer in Seattle; it's not a surprising thing. There's been a long enough history of it, a number of good universities like the University of Washington, a number of good tech companies like Amazon and Microsoft and Boeing who've been here.

It's that kind of culture and critical mass that is somewhat rare in the world and why we decided to come here specifically. That density of engineering is really valuable.

Facebook moves to new Seattle office, 2 people in 2010, now 90

Facebook has moved into a new office in Seattle.

Facebook had an opening event at its new Seattle engineering office, offering a public glimpse into new digs where the company has sweeping views and room to nearly double the team.

It relocated April 2 from crowded space near Pike Place Market where the Seattle office opened with two employees in August 2010. It now has about 90 engineers.

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Here are the current openings in the office.

Seattle, WA

Located downtown in the metropolitan heart of the great Pacific Northwest, this office will house many of the brightest engineers at Facebook. If you're an experienced engineer in the Seattle area, our Seattle office offers you a local opportunity to help build the next generation of Facebook.

21 open positions