Hit the 500+ connections on LinkedIn, decided to finally push

Some people religiously use LinkedIn.  I kind of use it when it is convenient and don't actually use the LinkedIn website more than every other week.  So, it's been a slow crawl to get up to 500+.  Yesterday I hit 499, and I decided to let LinkedIn crawl my e-mail to look for connections that I haven't connect with.  The list was 700+, and I whittled it down to 110 to connect with people who I know, but haven't' added them.  The 500th connection was a good friend who I have know for over 20 years and we both worked at Apple and Microsoft.

Here is a stream of the past 24 hours of connections that I decided to add.  I think this is most connections I have added in 24 hrs.  Thanks for accepting my connect requests.

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Google's super secret PUE plan is leaked

OK, this is too easy to just keep on writing about Google's data center images.  I think the release of the photos is better than a conference event.  Well, not all, but many.

One funny post is the top 10 easter eggs.

10 Easter eggs from inside a Google data center

The one I missed is this picture of the Google super secret PUE plan.  The author doesn't get it that the sub 1.0 PUE would be a good goal, not a bad one.

Google's secret plan

When you’re a big tech company, it’s never a good idea to let your secret plans leak out. In this case however, they might just want to rethink the plan entirely.

Photographs of 8 Google Data Center Locations - USA (6), Finland, Belgium

It's been a day since Google showed the inside of its data centers and in watching the media react I decided to spend a bit more time looking at what Google has done.  What I think almost everyone has missed is 8, yes eight data centers have photograph collections.

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I had an e-mail conversation with the photographer and we both commented on how beautiful the Hamina area is.  How many data center locations have a water front view and a sauna?  Well it turns out many of Google's data centers have water front views, but not saunas.

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This building in Hamina, Finland, holds the best of both worlds – a conference room for work and a sauna for after work. Both are available to employees whenever they like.

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The Lenoir site looks quite nice in a night time view.

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The Dalles has its waterfront view.

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Belgium has its own water treatment plant, so you could say they have their internal waterfront view.

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South Carolina has a rainwater retention pond that may get used in the future.

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A peaceful scene outside our data center in Berkeley County, South Carolina. We're currently experimenting with this rainwater retention pond as another source to cool our systems.

Iowa has huge water storage tanks on site.

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Water storage tanks make sure our data centers stay cool day or night.

Georgia shows its color coded pipes which includes the chilled water system.

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Thousands of feet of pipe line the inside of our data centers. We paint them bright colors not only because it's fun, but also to designate which one is which. The bright pink pipe in this photo transfers water from the row of chillers (the green units on the left) to a outside cooling tower.

Oklahoma is one of Google's newest data centers.  The cooling systems are modular.  And, you could see modularity concepts used in the white space, but you don't see containers to put servers in.

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Bright lights and the moon light light up our Mayes County data center. These modular units provide cooling for a portion of the center.

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Google Image Search - Google, Facebook, Apple, Microsoft, Amazon DC

With Google's release of an Insider's look of its data centers, I was curious what Google Image Search shows for Google, Facebook, Apple, Microsoft, Amazon.

The below are top 20 images from searching for "<company name> data center"

Some have made the point that Google's image publication was a PR move.  One thing that did work well from a PR move is most of the top 20 images are from what was published yesterday. You can make your own conclusions from looking at the images.  Note: the amazon pictures are many times not amazon facilities, but images that are embedded on a page where Amazon is mentioned. 

I included the links to image searches if you want to get to the original source of the images

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Microsoft

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Apple

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Amazon

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The Atlantlic slips a digit, 1.5% not 15% of energy used in Data Centers

The Atlantic choose to write an article on the top 5 things they learned from Google's disclosure.

The Five Coolest Things We Learned from Google's Data Center Tour

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REBECCA GREENFIELD2,128 Views2:27 PM ET

The usually cagey Google has decided to let the world inside one of its data centers, putting up an explanatory website complete with pretty pictures a virtual YouTube tour and a Street View tour. In addition, Google also let Wired's Steven Levy actually walk around the center in Lenoir, North Carolina, giving us more information ever about the hubs that power all the Google related Internetting we do. It's a lot. Here are the five awesomest things we learned.

One thing they didn't learn is how much power data centers use.

4. So many cords.

The place is huge This one site alone has 49,923 servers. In total, Google has over 1 million servers, estimates Levy. And data centers in general consume 15 percent of the world's electricity output.

You could send The Atlantic an e-mail to point up the error, but already how many people now think data centers consume 15% of the world's electricity output. :-)