Channel Register®

Original URL: http://www.channelregister.co.uk/2009/06/18/hp_pod/

HP sees techies living in a box

POD bay doors thrown open

By Chris Mellor

Posted in Enterprise, 18th June 2009 10:16 GMT

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HP has revealed its own POD containerised data centre at its Technology Forum [1] in Las Vegas.

The POD acronym stands for Performance-Optimised Datacentre and, like several other companies, HP has decided to follow in Sun's Project Blackbox [2] footsteps and build data centres in shipping containers.

HP POD

HP says it can be built and delivered, ready for use, in six weeks - which compares favourably to the months or years required for a new data centre suite or building.

Natch it's filled to the hilt with networked servers and storage. It is also positioned as being energy-efficient, cheaper and faster to implement than a building - as local authorities don't have to okay a new permanent structure - and even tax-efficient, as such structures can attract lower property taxes.

The specs say that the 40-foot container can house up to 3,520 compute nodes (blade servers) - 5,000 [3] if you use the new SL servers [4] - and 12,000 3.5-inch hard drives, or any combination, which HP claims to be the equivalent of a 4,000 sq ft data centre. Third-party blade servers can be used. PODs can be stacked two high.

The PODs, costing about $1.4m, are built in Houston and shipped worldwide. HP is envisaging setting up regional assembly centres and developing a POD lease offering. If you want to open the POD bay doors and look inside, then get more information here [5]. ®