Microsoft calls in the builders for Dublin data centre
Keeps staff costs low, automated, even
Posted in Servers, 7th November 2007 16:35 GMT
Webcast: Building Applications for the 21st Century
Microsoft is shelling out $500m on a new European data centre in Ireland to support its growing online business.
There will be tens of thousands of servers pumping out web-based apps to internet fanciers all over the world, the company says.
But it only needs to hire between 15 and 20 staff to run the behemoth's first Windows Live data centre not on US soil, because much of the system will be automated.
Despite the small number of jobs generated by the new power-chugging 50,000 sq ft site, which will be located in a biz park just outside Dublin, Prime Minister Bertie Ahern leapt in to applaud Microsoft's decision to plonk the building on Irish land.
He gushed that it was "a further example of Ireland being to the forefront when it comes to the cutting edge of technology... The Irish government recognises the importance of being a competitive, innovation-driven, knowledge economy," according to Associated Press.
Microsoft, which already has some 1,200 staff at a separate office in Ireland, said work would begin later this month and it expects the centre to open for business by 2009.
In related news, the software King Kong also looks set to be opening a separate data centre in Northlake, Illinois which will also chug out web-based apps to the masses.
Crain's Chicago Business reports that construction on a new $500m site large enough to hold eight [American] football fields was already underway. ®

The Register Guide to Extended Validation
Fundamental Principles of Air Conditioners for IT [WP 57]
Comparing Data Center Batteries, Flywheels, and Ultracapacitors [WP 65]
Deploying High-Density Zones in a Low-Density Data Center [WP134]
An Improved Architecture for High-Efficiency, High-Density Data Centers [WP126]

InfiniBand and 10GbE break data centre gridlock
Spare Backup signs Carphone Warehouse
SGI shows off Molecule concept machine
Super Micro super ready for Intel Nehalem Xeons