Hyperscale data centers to simplify it further are massive facilities that house a large number of servers and storage systems. They are designed to handle enormous amounts of data and provide cloud services to a wide range of users. These data centers are characterized by their scalability, high performance, and ability to handle large workloads. As the demand for cloud computing and data storage continues to grow, hyperscale data centers are becoming increasingly important in supporting the digital infrastructure of today's world.
@@dontebronaughPower redundancy and a large amount of power feeding your warehouse to fulfill their capabilities of your customers. These companies build their own substations to feed their buildings
@@dontebronaughbasically you might could look into Colocation Data Centers - and start there, then look into Managed Servers, Dedicated Servers, Shared Hosting, VPS Hosting, GPU Hosting. Your best bet after that, minus supplying power which is a huge thing right now, is how your data center connects to the Information Superhighway, there's the main pipeline that connects the grid, called the backbone or main pipeline from The US to Europe for example - you can also learn about it from the History of the Telephone Museum. That can explain it in detail. But the closer you are to the backbone the faster your latency, some data centers aren't directly connected to the main pipeline. CompUSA was directly on the Pipeline for example.
Hyperscale data centers to simplify it further are massive facilities that house a large number of servers and storage systems. They are designed to handle enormous amounts of data and provide cloud services to a wide range of users. These data centers are characterized by their scalability, high performance, and ability to handle large workloads. As the demand for cloud computing and data storage continues to grow, hyperscale data centers are becoming increasingly important in supporting the digital infrastructure of today's world.
What should I look for if I want to get into this business I have a 600k square foot warehouse
@@dontebronaughPower redundancy and a large amount of power feeding your warehouse to fulfill their capabilities of your customers. These companies build their own substations to feed their buildings
@@dontebronaughbasically you might could look into Colocation Data Centers - and start there, then look into Managed Servers, Dedicated Servers, Shared Hosting, VPS Hosting, GPU Hosting. Your best bet after that, minus supplying power which is a huge thing right now, is how your data center connects to the Information Superhighway, there's the main pipeline that connects the grid, called the backbone or main pipeline from The US to Europe for example - you can also learn about it from the History of the Telephone Museum. That can explain it in detail. But the closer you are to the backbone the faster your latency, some data centers aren't directly connected to the main pipeline. CompUSA was directly on the Pipeline for example.
Data is king. Trying to tell folks data infrastructure is the present and future. I've been in Loudoun County for 8 years seen the BOOM!
Thanks, always enjoy to listen to your podcasts. All the best !
Thanks guys for another great DC related episode.
Great discussion
Would be good to address concerns of folks living next to these Hyperscale Centers?
What technology is used today to “hyperscale” compute, network, and storage resources?
Big topic!
We're excited!
what do you consider in terms of connectivity for a hyperscale data centre?
Interesting but what's with the Starbucks product placement?
He sounds just like Joe Rogan
This name changed 3 time. Why did the nane change so much ?
Don’t just talk, PPT!
Rodriguez Elizabeth Allen Laura Lee Jennifer
Too verbose