• Episode 55 - The half-life of nuclear data centers with Chris Lohse, Idaho National Laboratory
    May 16 2024

    Nuclear power may have its detractors, but amid a growing capacity crunch data center operators are becoming increasingly interested in whether atoms can provide the electrons needed to power tomorrow's high-density facilities.


    In this episode, Chris Lohse of the Idaho National Laboratory, talks about the recent innovations around nuclear power, the highs and lows of recent years, and what the future might hold for nuclear-powered data centers.

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    45 mins
  • Episode 54 - Industry-wide sustainability with John Booth, Carbon3IT
    May 2 2024

    Sustainability needs to be applied at all levels of the data center industry, and we are not doing enough, says John Booth of Carbon3IT.


    In this episode of Zero Downtime, we sit down with sustainability consultant John Booth to talk about how he got where he is in his career, and the fundamental sustainability issues that he is seeing in the data center industry.


    We also talk about a past trip to Belarus that proved more exciting than expected. Tune in now for the latest episode.

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    1 hr and 1 min
  • Episode 53 - The UK data center market with Luisa Cardani, TechUK
    Apr 18 2024

    Bringing the L to FLAP-D, the UK has a prominent data center market. But like all other tier-one markets, London is struggling with space and power capacity. Because of this, the UK's data center industry will have to diversify, all while meeting increasingly regimented regulations. In this episode, we talk to trade association TechUK's Luisa Cardani about what the UK's data center industry is currently experiencing, from upcoming rules and regulations to emerging new markets, to the association's role in influencing policy.

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    36 mins
  • Episode 52 - Why Oxide rebuilt the rack from scratch
    Apr 4 2024

    Oxide Computer has been rebuilding the rack. In this podcast, CTO Bryan Cantrill tells us why.

    The data center industry has been building its own infrastructure for years, with the wrong components.

    Servers weren't designed to be operated in data centers, and the 1U rack unit is the wrong size, because of simple science. Part of the success of the cloud is that it takes that integration away, and gives users an easily consumed set of virtual servers and elastic infrastructure. But it costs, and it has pushed users to renting something they would be better off owning. That's why we heard of the "cloud diaspora" - organizations people bringing their IT back from the cloud.

    But what people need, Cantrill says, is an elastic infrastructure for the on-premise facility. In this podcast, you can hear him explaining why his team found they had to rebuild almost everything to deliver it.

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    1 hr and 4 mins
  • Episode 51 - Make way for bigger hard drives with B S Teh, CCO of Seagate
    Mar 14 2024

    Think hard drives have hit their storage limits, and should be replaced by solid-state units? You could be wrong.

    Hard drives have been holding our data for nearly 70 years since IBM created the 350, which stored something like 4 Mbyte on dozens of spinning disks in a unit the size of a washing machine.

    Today's devices are orders of magnitude better on every axis including price, capacity, size, and performance. But solid-state providers say it's time they moved over to make way for modern storage. Hard drives have been in a slump, but a new technique promises to double their capacity.

    Seagate is the first to bring heat-assisted magnetic recording (HAMR) to the market, so we invited chief commercial officer B S Teh to tell us why it is such a big deal, why it's taken so long - and how it could change what you do in your data center.

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    29 mins
  • Episode 50 - The fundamentals of quantum computing with Yuval Boger, QuEra
    Feb 22 2024

    In this episode of Zero Downtime, we break down the fundamentals of quantum computing - the different approaches out there, the challenges to bringing it into a widespread commercial reality, and the potential use cases that quantum may help with.

    To help divulge this, we speak to QuEra's Yuval Boger who shares a little about the company's experience with the technology, including how we can go about deploying quantum computers inside data centers.

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    29 mins
  • Episode 49 - How CDNs quietly took over the Internet, with Mark de Jong, CDN Alliance
    Feb 8 2024

    25 years ago, the first content delivery networks (CDNs) emerged, to solve a specific problem - how to make web pages load faster.

    More than two decades later, 72 percent of Internet content is delivered through CDNs. But the companies involved are still almost invisible - until something goes wrong.

    In 2021, in a series of outages, large numbers of unrelated websites all went out of action at the same time. It turned out that these sites had all come to rely on the same CDNs, effectively installing a single point of failure for large sections of the Internet. 

    Since then, large service providers have worked out how to avoid this problem - and one CDN provider told us in a podcast what to do when it does happen. 

    Major CDN players have extended into a distributed cloud role, running applications at the edge, and Cloudflare, for one, believes CDNs have a huge opportunity in "inference" - when AI pre-trained systems are deployed for actual applications.

    2021 also saw the formation of the CDN Alliance, an industry body that aims to be a voice and forum for CDN players, along with the ecosystem that has grown up around them. 

    Mark de Jong, founder and chair of the CDN Alliance, tells us why CDNs need a voice, and what they need to be saying. 

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    40 mins
  • Episode 48 - How to face up to regulations, with Venessa Moffat, EkkoSense
    Jan 25 2024

    Europe has an Energy Efficiency Directive, Germany has an Energy Efficiency Act, and operators there can be fined for inefficiency.

    Meanwhile, Amsterdam has declared war on sleeping servers, and set limits on where facilities can be built. Across Europe, in response to congested electric grids and shortages of land, local governments are stepping in to regulate data centers.

    Sometimes they want them to be greener, sometimes they want them to be quieter, and sometimes they just want them somewhere else. But any data center operator now has to be prepared to meet new reporting requirements and talk to the local authorities about their business. 

    This is not a bad thing, says Venessa Moffat, head of channel partner manager EMEA Europe for EkkoSense. It's about time those discussions happened.

    People who run cities need to understand the businesses that are located there - and from those discussions, new partnerships can emerge. 

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    31 mins