Green Data Center in NC featuring Apple, Google, and Facebook

GigaOm's Katie Fehrenbacher has a detailed state of the green data center story in NC featuring Apple, Google, and Facebook.

The controversial world of clean power and data centers

Poles dot the dusty solar farm, which will eventually hold solar panels.

This article is the third in a four-part series that we’re publishing this week.

Over the past several years, a couple-hundred-mile area north of Charlotte, North Carolina, has emerged as a new hub for massive data centers that power the Internet, attracting industry heavyweights like Apple, Google and Facebook. North Carolina has been able win over those companies despite the fact it generates its power largely from dirty coal and nuclear, which runs counter to a general trend toward a desire for greener sources of energy.

The post is long, but a quick read.  Here is the main point that highlights Apple vs. Google vs. Facebook.

Grid-connected vs off-grid clean power

At this point, Apple seems to mostly stand alone in its desire to build such massive clean power plants next to a data center. The only other firm to announce that it will tackle something similar is eBay. Last month eBay announced that it would build an extension to one of its data centers in Utah that would run off 30 fuel cells, powered by biogas, and use the grid as backup power.

Google’s data center in Lenoir

Google has arguably been the most innovative and aggressive web business when it comes to clean power. But Google’s Demasi told me that Google has “a basic philosophy that renewable energy should be provided through the utility.”

Likewise Facebook’s VP of Site Operations Tom Furlong, told me: “The utility is the obvious location [for clean power]. It would be a lot easier if the utility came to the site with 20 percent renewables and said this is our mix.” Facebook’s sustainability guru Bill Weihl (formerly of Google) emphasizes that Facebook is still working out its strategy for clean power for data centers and he isn’t ruling out onsite clean-power generation. But Weihl also says he’s interested in one day possibly creating an industry trade group that could help bring together companies to influence utilities’ grid choices through the group purchasing of clean power.

 

Note that Greenpeace is planning an update tomorrow.

While questions still remain about how exactly Apple will meet its 100 percent clean power data centers goals (see Greenpeace report out tomorrow),  Apple is clearly acting as a pioneer.

Wil City of SF employees protest their EPEAT policy that stops the purchase of Apple Computers

There are some people out there who think City of SF stopping the purchase of Apple Computer products due to lack of EPEA will cause the focus to be on Apple to change.

City of SF won’t buy Macs without EPEAT certification

We sort of knew this was coming. Just days after news hit that Apple no longer wants its computers and monitors evaluated for EPEAT certification, the first public agency has said it will no longer be allowed to buy Macs as a result.

The City of San Francisco is (unsurprisingly) first up, according to theWall Street Journal:

Officials with the San Francisco Department of Environment told CIO Journal on Monday they would send out letters over the next two weeks, informing all 50 of the city’s agencies that Apple laptops and desktops “will no longer qualify” for purchase with city funds.

Who will suffer in the short term?  The City of SF users who were hoping that July 1 in a new quarter to purchase Macs will find their orders rejected.  Which will also mean buying Windows SW to replace their Mac copies.  Who has the budget for that?  And worse, the Mac Loyalists will be forced to switch to Windows.

Maybe one of the media people will go interview some City of SF employees, but most likely not.  Who wants to read news about City of SF employees whining about their switch from Macs to Windows. 

If this seems silly.  It is.  And, most likely will not play out the way some hope that Apple change its mind and accept EPEAT.

Wow, Touring North Carolina sightseeing Data Centers of Google, Apple, and Facebook

GigaOm has a post on a tour of Google, Apple, and Facebook's data centers.

Would you take a trip to North Carolina to tour these data centers?  Well it's not really a tour if you don't get to go inside.  This is more like a drive by the gates of the data centers.

The ultimate geek road trip: North Carolina’s mega data center cluster

This article is the first in a four-part series that we’re publishing this week.

One day, one tank of gas, and three data centers – it was a road trip that only a geek would dream up. My destination: a cluster of cutting-edge and massive data centers spread across a few hundred miles north of Charlotte, North Carolina.

If data centers, filled with thousands of servers, are the engines of the Internet, then North Carolina is one of the garages for the Hummers of the tech world: The state is where Apple, Google and Facebook have decided to build their East Coast data centers. It’s a coup for North Carolina to have wooed all three elite Internet brands.


View Road trip: The North Carolina data center corrider in a larger map

MacBook Pro Retina vs. Thinkpad T530 vs. Dell M4600, creatives would choose Pro

I just got my MacBook Pro Retina on yesterday and I am so glad I opted for 16GB of memory.  Curious I decided to do a bit of price comparison.

My MacBook Pro Retina is configured with Intel i7 2.6 GHz 4 core, 16 GB of memory and 512 GB SSD with the highest end Retina Display.  These are what I looked for when comparing to a Thinkpad and Dell Laptop. Price $2999

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Dell M4600 Laptop has the enterprise options with multiple drives, etc.  I added equivalent processor, RAM, and SSD.  Price $4,648

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Lenovo Thinkpad T530 has again many more options, but only allows a 180 GB SSD, so the $3,409 price would be much higher if you could add a 512 GB SSD.

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Let alone how these machines look.

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The Dell XPS 15 is $1799, but at this time I could not upgrade the RAM, or SSD.  It's price is $1799 for 8GB and 720 GB HD.

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The MacBook Pro is being criticized for being too expensive.  It is not for those who the MacBook Air works fine.  Apple was smart in limiting the MacBook Air to 4GB.  

If you want 8-16GB of RAM a 512 GB SSD. And, 4 core i7 is useful, then the MacBook Pro fits.  

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I used to work at Apple on OS, and Microsoft on Windows.  I run Parallels and Windows 7 on the Macbook Pro which is another reason why 16 GB of memory is nice.

Apple's Reno Data Center Project = $103 mil bldg + $1 bil of equipment over 10 yrs

A few of us are having some laughs as the media says the Apple Reno data center is a billion dollar data center.

Here is one example from GigaOm.

Apple looking to build $1B Nevada data center by year’s end

Apple’s North Carolina data center

Apple’s taking a billion dollars and heading to Reno, but it’s going to avoid the slots: it plans to invest the money in a data center and a separate shipping and receiving office.

I've been waiting for the public disclosure to get the numbers closer to what would not get us laughing.  Las Vegas Sun has what makes sense.

Construction of the data center just east of Sparks is expected to generate a one-time $103 million economic impact, and Apple has said it will invest $1 billion in equipment for the storage center.

The Las Vegas Sun provides details on the tax incentives passed.

Here’s how it will work: The state can waive all but 2 percent of the sales tax rate for the server equipment Apple purchases for the data center. But by opening a second location in a special tourism improvement district in downtown Reno — an office meant simply to receive shipment of those servers — Apple is eligible to be reimbursed 75 percent of the 2 percent sales tax it still owes.

That piece of the deal is up for City Council approval today.

After all of its abatements and reimbursements, Apple would pay only 0.5 percent sales tax — instead of 7.5 percent — on the $1 billion in server equipment it’s expected to buy over the next 10 years.

Personal income from the local construction is estimated to be $15 million.

An economic impact analysis — named “Project Jonathan” after the medium-sized sweet apple to hide the company’s identity — estimates it will generate 329 direct and indirect jobs for the community with a total personal income of $15 million.

When you see all these facts, you can see why a $1B data center is a hype to get people to think it is a big deal.

This is a $100 million data center with 0.5% tax rate on $1B of IT equipment purchased over 10 years.  Would you be excited by the $5 mil in sales tax collected over 10 years from Apple's presence?  Apple got a great deal.