Channel Register

HP sees techies living in a box

HP has revealed its own POD containerised data centre at its Technology Forum in Las Vegas. The POD acronym stands for Performance-Optimised Datacentre and, like several other companies, HP has decided to follow in Sun's Project Blackbox footsteps and build data centres in shipping containers. HP POD HP says it can be built …

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Anonymous Coward

Geez...

Joke

I hope they won´t repack it in a 27 times larger cardboard box, like their EULAs.

Lionel Baden 1

just waiting

for the story that 5 trucks turned up and nicked 10 of these containers !

its gonna happen sooner or later

Tempest 3K

Dave?

Coat

Will HAL be responsible for these PODS, and if so, will Dave be able to get in this time?

Stephen Gray

Spiffing idea

Right up until some barsteward does exactly what Lionel Baden 1 mentions. Other than that its a winner.

Anonymous Coward

Good idea

Anonymous Coward

computers will just get smaller and more insidious, but this is a good stop gap position for that move.

Computer work best in a climate controlled manner, and rooms are not the best to make that happen, better to build a box.

Chris Mellor 1

A year old

HP first announced its PODs almost a year ago, in June 2008 - http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/07/16/hp_pod_data_center/

The number of included servers has gone up since then but not the number of disk drives. We might think it could be a bit of a solution looking for a problem. Until we get sales figures we won't know.

Chris.

Andy Dingley

Welcome to the new HP

Unhappy

That's not a datacenter, that's the new Bristol Labs building.

peef

yes but...

Black Helicopters

Are they grounded vis-a-vis lightning storms?

David Jones 3

When they get the size down a bit we'll be able to say....

Happy

..behold your new overlords.

Anonymous Coward

@ Lionel - hijacking and other high crimes

Unhappy

Nothing to see here. A 40' container can routinely contain goods valued in excess of the paltry $1.4M cited here. And the DO get nicked on occasion.

Consider how many Nikons, iPods, <pick your favorite high-end consumer item> you can stuff inside a box 40' X 9' X 8'. Multiply by retail cost.

I make it to be about $3M for ipods, as a rough guess.

Company I used to work for had a case where high-value freight being trucked into the US from Mexico (car parts?) was being hijacked. Suspected to be an inside job... somebody was tipping off the bad guys as to which container on which truck had the good stuff.

jake

Obligatory & @Lionel & @peef

Does it run Linux?[1]

Lional, I kind of suspect that the power cables will be strong enough to act as a fairly decent anchor.

peef, the container is a grounded steel box, and thus a pretty good Faraday cage.

[1] Well, somebody had to say it! (Yes, I know, it does.)

Michael 28

Hmm.. Who would use these?

Pirate

http://promotetheprogress.com/blog/googles-sea-based-data-center-patent-highlights-the-narrow-focus-of-the-companys-call-for-patent-reform/1221/

Redmond to follow......hopefully.

Arrr!

Matt Bryant

Totally containerised site!

Boffin

Just down the road from one of our branch offices there is a "temporary office" that has sprung up for a well-known gas supplier. We watched as they built a two-story corral of Portakabin-type offices, and the other week they craned two containers with AC units and plenty of power cables into the middle, probably their new datacenter. At a guess, I'd say the whole affair has been probably less than half as expensive to build as the concrete and steel monstrosity that is our branch office, and has been assembled in a matter of weeks. Maybe this is the way most non-HQ offices will be going.

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