Quantcast
Channel: Data Center Frontier
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 2336

The Data Center is Dead. Long Live the Data Center

$
0
0

The data center is dead. Ask any pundit and they’ll tell you so. Go to a cloud conference or do a search on the internet. There is no shortage of people predicting the end of the data center. Cloud is going to eat the world. There will be no enterprise IT in five years. Colocation is a dying business. If so then, why are there so many people building data centers?

topThis week’s Voices of the Industry, Bill Dougherty of RagingWire, shares insights from his discussion with Jeff Frick, cohost of theCUBE, from the SiliconANGLE Media team.

I was speaking at the Structure 2015, one of the premier cloud conferences. It’s a fantastic industry event to learn about the latest trends in cloud computing and Dev ops. But it’s a strange place for a data center guy to hang out. Or is it?.

In my many conversations, I offered the opinion, and found consensus often, that the death of the data center has been greatly exaggerated. Cloud, and most specifically public cloud, will continue to grow. But so too will colocation. There are four key drivers to this trend:

  • Clouds live somewhere. The place they live is in data centers. And with the exception of the “super 7,” most cloud providers don’t want to build or operate their own data centers. It isn’t their core business and a 20-year data center investment doesn’t match their operating time frames. It’s too limiting.
  • Not all workloads belong in the public cloud. At the end of the day, computers exist to do work. Public cloud is great for non-persistent workloads, such as web servers and streaming media. If you can lose a machine, or a whole set of machines, and you don’t care, then public cloud works. But many workloads, especially legacy transactional systems are persistent. The old rules of ACID (Atomicity, Consistency, Isolation and Durability) apply. For most organizations, these systems don’t belong in the cloud.
  • Regulatory Compliance is an issue. This includes not only security but also change management, data localization, and taxation. For many organizations, where the transaction occurs, and where the data lives, can have large financial implications. We see this most especially in financial and health care companies, but it also applies to e-commerce companies and any company generating or storing confidential personal data.
  • Data growth is outpacing storage capacity. According to IBM research, 90% of the data in the world today was created in the last 2 years, and 80% of that data is unstructured. It’s been said that up to 80% of the data being generated is never persisted because the systems/storage/bandwidth required is not yet available. This is the world created by the Internet of Things (IoT), Big Data, mobile and social. We now instrument not only homes and cars, but tractors and dog bowls. There is simply no limit to the number of devices we can and will connect to the network. And they all need servers and storage.

All of this leads to a robust demand for data center space, with no near-term end in sight. It’s a hybrid world, and companies will continue to operate their own data centers, utilize colocation, and move some work into the cloud.

The data center isn’t dead, it is very much alive and growing rapidly.

William Dougherty,  is the CTO, RagingWire Data Centers. RagingWire is responding to this demand by ramping up its growth across the United States. Our campus in Ashburn, Virginia will double in size in February 2016, and we’ve begun construction on a second campus in Virginia that will let us build up to 2 million square feet of data center space. In Northern California, we have 680,000 square feet operational and are looking for land for our next campus. And in Dallas, Texas we’ve started construction on a 1 million square feet campus.

 


Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 2336

Trending Articles