Is the cloud moving to the sea?
In this week’s Exponential Chats, some of the team members responsible for Amalgam’s development will have a chat about Microsoft’s Project codenamed Natick which was an attempt of sustainably running a Data Center underwater. After 2 years of deployment, Microsoft is claiming that their servers were up to 8 times more reliable than their counterparts on land. Is that an indication that the cloud is actually moving to the sea? Come join us and participate by asking questions or giving your opinion in the live chat.
– Adriano Marques is the founder and CEO of Exponential Ventures.
– Fernando Camargo is a Data Scientist with in-depth machine learning expertise and wide-ranging experience in software engineering.
– Nathan Martins is a Machine Learning/DevOps Engineer at Exponential Ventures, where he works on projects to democratize AI, as well as other cutting edge innovations.
– Harlei Vicente is a Senior software architect specialized in creating great experiences for the end user and optimizing interfaces for desktop and mobile.
If the idea of the Clouds somehow moving from the sky to the sea made you confused, don’t worry. We’re not talking about clouds in the sky, but rather the concept of cloud infrastructure for internet services going from land installations to underwater installations. Ok, I admit. Even if you thought of the right cloud, this is probably still confusing. Why would anyone go through the trouble of trying to run computers 200 meters deep in the ocean?
Let’s break this down quickly. There are four single major infrastructural challenges when it comes to building data centers for the cloud.
The first one is power. A typical Data Center will house tens of thousands of servers. The typical cloud data center will consume no less than 10MW of power. That is enough energy to power about 6500 average homes, and managing all that power is a big challenge.
The second challenge is, therefore heat. Computers generate a lot of it in the process of converting energy into computing activities. The more power a data center consumes, the more heat it generates. Unfortunately, computers are not able to reliably operate at high temperatures, which requires engineers to employ cooling solutions capable of keeping them cool. But there are no free lunches in the world of data centers. When you turn on a giant air conditioner to cool off 10MW worth of servers, you may end up requiring another 10MW of power if your solution is particularly inefficient.
The third challenge is space. All of those machines require a vast amount of real state, and the A/C not only is required to cool the equipment it will also be required to cool the air inside the structure, requiring more power and a bigger cooling system.
The fourth challenge is people. These machines are bound to fail at some point, requiring a human to enter the data center to repair the equipment. If humans come in, they typically need oxygen to survive. And wherever oxygen is, there are two problems that follow: Oxidation and Fires.
The community has discussed for years about a true lights out data center solution in which humans are never required to access the computers at any point, but none of the proposed solutions were quite feasible or economically sound.
Then came Microsoft with the idea of sinking the datacenter deep into the ocean to tap into the massive amount of cool water to decrease cooling power requirements and remove all oxygen from inside the datacenter, completely eliminating the risk of fires and increasing the lifespan of the servers by reducing oxidation.
On its face, it seems that this is a crazy idea, but 2 months ago Microsoft brought back to the surface a Data Center they sunk into the north sea 2 years ago and left it running since then and compared the reliability of these servers against an identical data center they maintained on land. Amongst their findings, they learned that not only the underwater data center was more sustainable and faster to deploy but it was 8 times more reliable than its land counterpart. Which prompted our team to ask: is the cloud moving to the sea?
Exponential Chats is a live event conducted by our parent company, Exponential Ventures. In this event, our team members and guests have an in-depth conversation about Exponential Technologies, Entrepreneurship, and some of the world’s most challenging outstanding problems.
This live episode will air on Thrusday, September 17th 2020 at 1:00 PM CST. Here is a link to the live event on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wh9gH5uN2Vg
THE BLOG
News, lessons, and content from our companies and projects.
41% of small businesses that employ people are operated by women.
We’ve been talking to several startups in the past two weeks! This is a curated list of the top 5 based on the analysis made by our models using the data we collected. This is as fresh as ...
Porto Seguro Challenge – 2nd Place Solution
We are pleased to announce that we got second place in the Porto Seguro Challenge, a competition organized by the largest insurance company in Brazil. Porto Seguro challenged us to build an ...
Predicting Reading Level of Texts – A Kaggle NLP Competition
Introduction: One of the main fields of AI is Natural Language Processing and its applications in the real world. Here on Amalgam.ai we are building different models to solve some of the problems ...
Porto Seguro Challenge
Introduction: In the modern world the competition for marketing space is fierce, nowadays every company that wants the slight advantage needs AI to select the best customers and increase the ROI ...
Sales Development Representative
At Exponential Ventures, we’re working to solve big problems with exponential technologies such as Artificial Intelligence, Quantum Computing, Digital Fabrication, Human-Machine ...
Exponential Hiring Process
The hiring process is a fundamental part of any company, it is the first contact of the professional with the culture and a great display of how things work internally. At Exponential Ventures it ...
Exponential Ventures annonce l’acquisition de PyJobs, FrontJobs et RecrutaDev
Fondé en 2017, PyJobs est devenu l’un des sites d’emploi les plus populaires du Brésil pour la communauté Python. Malgré sa croissance agressive au cours de la dernière année, ...
Exponential Ventures announces the acquisition of PyJobs, FrontJobs, and RecrutaDev
Founded in 2017, PyJobs has become one of Brazil’s most popular job boards for the Python community. Despite its aggressive growth in the past year, PyJobs retained its community-oriented ...
Sales Executive
At Exponential Ventures, we’re working to solve big problems with exponential technologies such as Artificial Intelligence, Quantum Computing, Digital Fabrication, Human-Machine ...
What is a Startup Studio?
Spoiler: it is NOT an Incubator or Accelerator I have probably interviewed a few hundred professionals in my career as an Entrepreneur. After breaking the ice, one of the first things I do is ask ...
Social Media
At Exponential Ventures, we’re working to solve big problems with exponential technologies such as Artificial Intelligence, Quantum Computing, Digital Fabrication, Human-Machine ...
Hunting for Unicorns
Everybody loves unicorns, right? But perhaps no one loves them more than tech companies. When hiring for a professional, we have an ideal vision of who we are looking for. A professional with X ...
Stay In The Loop!
Receive updates and news about XNV and our child companies. Don't worry, we don't SPAM. Ever.