Google has, after many years of keeping its data centre infrastructure secret from the rest of the technology world, joined Facebook’s Open Compute Project (OCP).
Announced at the annual Open Compute Summit in San Jose, not only has Google joined the OCP but it is already working with Facebook on new hardware.
It was 2011 when Facebook took the lid off its server designs, and one-upped competitors who thought keeping their own data centre hardware secret would give them a competitive edge.
Slowly but surely, others joined the OCP, agreeing the mutual benefits to everyone in sharing data centre designs to advance computing in an age of massive scalability and artificial intelligence.
But up until this week, just Amazon and Google remained out of the OCP. Today, it’s just Amazon keeping tight lipped about its data centres as Google admits it now wants to help standardise designs for hardware such as GPUs for machine learning applications.
“The Open Compute community is an established collection of consumers and producers, and we see an opportunity to contribute our experience and expand the Open Rack specification,” wrote John Zipfel, technical programme manager at Google, on Google’s blog.
“Today’s launch is a first step in a larger effort. We think there are other areas of possible collaboration with OCP. We’ve recently begun engaging the industry to identify better disk solutions for cloud based applications.
“And we think that we can work with OCP to go even further, looking up the software stack to standardise server and networking management systems. We look forward to new and exciting advancements to come with the OCP community.”
“We kicked-off the development of 48V rack power distribution in 2010, as we found it was at least 30 percent more energy efficient and more cost effective in supporting these higher-performance systems,” wrote Zipfel.
“Our 48V architecture has since evolved and includes servers with 48V to point-of-load designs, and rack-level 48V Li-Ion UPS systems. Google has been designing and using 48V infrastructure at scale for several years, and we feel comfortable with the robustness of the design and its reliability.
“As the industry’s working to solve these same problems and dealing with higher-power workloads, such as GPUs for machine learning, it makes sense to standardise this new design by working with OCP.”
Security vendor Flashpoint debuts partner programme following $28m funding
Complex buying journeys and sprawling partner networks hampering customer experience, says Accenture
Datacentre provider Cyxtera says launch is “milestone in our go-to-market strategy”
Ensono highlights importance of mainframes still to major industries
Security vendor VASCO looks to replicate UK and German set up across EMEA
Splunk details investment in Partner+ programme at .conf2017