Microsoft Has 1 Million Servers. So What? 172
itwbennett writes "The only thing that's noteworthy about Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer's recent disclosure that the company has one million servers in its data centers is that he decided to disclose it — most of the industry giants like to keep that information to themselves, says ITworld's Nancy Gohring. But just for fun, Amazon Web Services engineer James Hamilton did the math: One million servers equals 15–30 data centers, a $4.25 billion capital expense, and power consumption of 2.6TWh annually, or the amount of power that would be used by 230,000 homes in the U.S. Whether this is high or low, good or bad is impossible to know without additional metrics."
One Million ... (Score:2, Interesting)
They have one million servers, but how many are running Linux?
Re:How much of that information is useful (Score:4, Interesting)
I wonder about this:
One million servers equals ... power consumption of 2.6TWh annually, or the amount of power that would be used by 230,000 homes in the U.S.
So 1 home uses as much power as 4 servers? Are we talking about super high-powered servers, or really low-powered homes?
Re:How do you calculate space and power... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:How much of that information is useful (Score:4, Interesting)
They've already said that they'll have 300,000 servers backing the various services for the Xbox One. Having another 700,000 on stuff like Bing, Outlook.com (née Hotmail), and their various stores (music, video, apps, etc.) doesn't seem unreasonable, though it's hard to say if it's a good use of that many, since I have no sense of what's appropriate when we're talking about this sort of scale.
Re:and every one of them has an NSA back door. (Score:5, Interesting)
I'd be willing to bet he's counting virtual servers as servers.