I meant to post this, but forgot to send it back in April. Oh well, I need to put this up so I can make a point with my next post. :-)
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It's been interesting watching the news on the new Facebook Iowa Data Center. It was big news for many, but I knew about the Facebook Midwest Data Center back in January.
It's been so long ago, I can't even remember how I found out about the new Facebook data center. I didn't share my discovery beyond a close group of data center friends where we discussed why would Facebook build a huge data center in the midwest given their large presence in Prineville and Forest City? My friends couldn't come up with a good answer.
The one idea I threw out is Facebook is going for an Active-Active strategy. Prineville to Iowa. Forest City to Iowa. If Prineville goes down, fail over to Iowa. Same for Forest City. There is complete data redundancy between the East and West Coast to the midwest data center.
Now that Facebook Iowa Data center is public.
A New Data Center for Iowa
April 22, 2013
By Jay Parikh
Today we’re thrilled to announce that Altoona, Iowa, will be the home for Facebook’s newest data center.
There are more of us who can chat about what Facebook will put in its midwest data center and how it will interact with its other sites.
Everyone exaggerates. The big one that got away gets bigger with every telling. That one yard plunge you made for a touchdown in high school now stands at 50 yards, and getting longer, and of course you really did use to have a 30 inch waist. Hyperbole is not a bad thing. The advertising business is built upon it and so are most of our egos. Al Gore has made a career of it ($200 million at last count). In our everyday lives, we accept a certain amount of puffery surrounding most any assertion that we hear—let’s call it our personal plus or minus 10%—but sometimes we just have to jump in tell someone that “it’s time to pull in the reigns there cowboy”. I ran across just such a case the other day when I read someone describe data centers as “today’s steel mills”. While I agree that everyone has a right to use hyperbole to make a point, I think this guy’s abusing the privilege.





