Google joins the Open Compute Project
to drive IT infrastructure development forward through open source hardware
Google today announced that it is joining the Open Compute Project (OCP), a five-year-old project founded by Facebook and a number of other companies that aims to drive IT infrastructure development forward through open source hardware. For Facebook, for example, this has meant open sourcing how it builds some of its servers and other data center hardware.
Over the last few years, Google also shared some information about how
it powers its data centers, but now it has also signed on to work with
Facebook and others to work on the OCP Open Rack project, for example.
This project aims to bring 48 volt power distribution to data center
racks. Google says it has been working on 48V rack power distribution
since 2010 and, in the process, it found that it was 30 percent more
energy-efficient that its previous-generation 12V systems.
“As
the industry’s working to solve these same problems and dealing with
higher-power workloads, such as GPUs for machine learning, it makes
sense to standardize this new design by working with OCP,” Google
technical program manager John Zipfel writes in today’s announcement.
“We believe this will help everyone adopt this next generation power
architecture, and realize the same power efficiency and cost benefits as
Google.”
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