Underwater tech: Why does Microsoft want to dunk its data centers?
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In the quest for affordable data centers, Microsoft has gone where no technology company has gone before: underwater.听
Data centers, which host everything from e-mail accounts to social media profiles,聽require lots of energy. Just as laptops and cellphones heat up when they are working really hard, data centers have thousands of computer servers that get very hot. To avoid overheating and crashing, companies are forced to foot expensive air conditioning bills.听
Some companies such as Facebook have 聽to lower cooling costs.听聽
But Microsoft tried a new way to cool data centers by placing an eight-foot server vessel 30 feet underwater. The experimental trial period of Leona Philpot, Microsoft's eight-foot prototype named after a character in the Xbox game "Halo," lasted between August and November of last year 1 kilometer off the California coast.听
The conclusion? Leona Philpot was more successful than expected. And more important, say Microsoft engineers, underwater data centers hold exciting potential.
鈥淲hen I first heard about this I thought, 鈥榃ater 鈥 electricity, why would you do that?鈥 Ben Cutler, a Microsoft computer designer who worked on the Project Natick system, told The New York Times. 鈥淏ut as you think more about it, .鈥澛
Primarily, Project Natick could reduce latency, engineers鈥 term for the amount of time it takes servers to respond to users' online requests. Today鈥檚 data centers are built in remote places that offer the necessary room or colder climates 鈥 making data travel a long distance between its source and destination.听
鈥淗alf of the world鈥檚 population lives within 200 km of the ocean so placing datacenters offshore increases the proximity of the datacenter to the population鈥 says the Project Natick website, 鈥渄ramatically reducing latency and .鈥澛
Microsoft also believes it can speed up the production process so a ready-to-use vessel is set up in just 90 days, which聽could come in handy for , such as World Cup events or natural disaster sites. 聽
And Microsoft suggests the future of underwater data centers holds environmental promise, not damage.听
Natick engineers say the vessel consumes no water, does not heat up the water, and does not cause noise pollution for nearby sea life.
Using acoustic sensors, the engineers determined that the movements of nearby shrimp drowned out any underwater noise from Natick, and they 鈥渕easured no heating of the marine environment ,鈥 Dr. Lee told The New York Times.听
And in the future, engineers believe subsea data centers could be zero-emission by using to generate the necessary electricity.听
鈥淣atick datacenters are envisioned to be fully recycled. Made from recycled material which in turn is recycled at the end of life of the datacenter,鈥 the Microsoft team explains on Natick鈥檚 website. 鈥淎 Natick datacenter co-located with offshore renewable energy sources could be truly zero emission: no waste products, whether due to the power generation, computers, or human maintainers are .鈥澛
Instead, the greatest challenge involves the vessels鈥 relationship with humans, not the environment.听
Data centers on land are easily accessible to engineers and witness frequent tweaks and fixes. But underwater systems, comparatively, need to survive years without maintenance or regular checkups. And Microsoft sees this challenge as a positive, not a negative.听
鈥淲e see this as an opportunity to field long-lived, resilient datacenters that operate 鈥榣ights out鈥 鈥 nobody on site 鈥 with very high reliability for the entire life of the deployment, ,鈥 Natick鈥檚 website explains.听
But the long-term feasibility and environmental impact remain to be seen with further trials. Microsoft is already working on its next underwater project, a data center .听