Xeon E5-2600 Review

http://www.anandtech.com/show/5553/the-xeon-e52600-dual-sandybridge-for-servers

Intel’s Sandy Bridge architecture was introduced to desktop users more than a year ago. Server parts however have been much slower to arrive, as it has taken Intel that long to transpose this new engine into a Xeon processor. Although the core architecture is the same, the system architecture is significantly different from the LGA-1155 CPUs, making this CPU quite a challenge, even for Intel.

 

Mystery Men Forge Servers For Giants of Internet

Hyve Solutions was created to serve the world’s “large-scale internet companies” — companies increasingly interested in buying servers designed specifically for their sweeping online operations. Because their internet services are backed by such an enormous number of servers, these companies are looking to keep the cost and the power consumption of each system to a minimum. They want something a little different from the off-the-shelf machines purchased by the average business. “What we saw was a migration from traditional servers to more custom-built servers,” says Hyve senior vice president and general manager Steve Ichinaga. “The trend began several years ago with Google, and most recently, Facebook was added to the ranks of companies who want this kind of solution.”

via Mystery Men Forge Servers For Giants of Internet | Wired Enterprise | Wired.com.

Hyve is a place where internet giants can go if they want Open Compute servers. But even before Hyve was created, Synnex was working for the big internet names. It has long provided custom machines for Rackspace — the San Antonio, Texas company that offers infrastructure services across the net as a scale rivaled only by Amazon

Super-secret Google builds servers in the dark

Google is one of many big-name Web outfits that lease data center space from Equinix—a company whose massive computing facilities serve as hubs for the world’s biggest Internet providers. All the big Web names set up shop in these data centers, so that they too can plug into the hub. The irony is that they must also share space with their biggest rivals, and this may cause some unease with companies that see their hardware as a competitive advantage best hidden from others.

via Super-secret Google builds servers in the dark.

Google declined to comment on Sharp’s little anecdote. But the tale is not surprising. Google designs its own servers and its own networking gear, and though it still leases space in third-party data centers such as the Equinix facility, it’s now designing and building its own data centers as well. These designs are meant to improve the performance of the company’s Web services but also save power and money. More so than any other outfit, Google views its data center work as an important advantage over competitors.

Estimate: Amazon Cloud Backed by 450,000 Servers

How many servers does it take to power Amazon’s huge cloud computing operation? Like many large Internet companies, Amazon doesn’t disclose details of its infrastructure, including how many servers it uses. But a researcher estimates that Amazon Web Services is using at least 454,400 servers in seven data center hubs around the globe.

Huan Liu, a research manager at Accenture Technology Labs, analyzed Amazon’s EC2 compute service using internal and external IP addresses, which he extrapolated to come up with estimates for the number of racks in each data center location. Liu then applied an assumption of 64 blade servers per rack – four 10U chassis, each holding eight blades – to arrive at the estimate.

via Estimate: Amazon Cloud Backed by 450,000 Servers » Data Center Knowledge.

Sweet Mother of God.

George Takei Helps Facebook Debug MySQL

George Takei Helps Facebook Debug MySQL » Data Center Knowledge.

Wait – what was that last one? In today’s update on the Facebook Engineering blog, Mark Callaghan discusses the challenges in getting MySQL to scale on Facebook’s multi-core servers. The post provides technical insight into Facebook’s scalability initiatives, and then gives a shout out to Takei for helping resolve a database issue.

I have facebook blocked on my servers but will have to come back and look at the linked to blog entry.

Ping-o-Matic!

What is this?

Ping-O-Matic is a service to update different search engines that your blog has updated.

Learn more…

We regularly check downstream services to make sure that they’re legit and still work. So while it may appear like we have fewer services, they’re the most important ones.

Make sure to only ping specialized services if they’re relevant to your blog, otherwise you’ll cause an undue burden on them.

via Ping-o-Matic!.

Web Analytics Plans & Pricing: Newsbeat Monitoring Plans for Publishers

What are “concurrent” visitors?

Concurrent visitors are the total number of people simultaneously on your site at any one moment in time.

What is a “seat”?

A seat is an individual license to a personalized newsbeat dashboard and account. Seats give you complete flexibility over who sees what, so everyone is focused on what’s important to them. Each of the newsbeat plans comes with a preset number of seats, but you can add seats at any time.

via Web Analytics Plans & Pricing: Newsbeat Monitoring Plans for Publishers.

Broadcasters Sue To Stop $12 Streaming Service Aereo

Aereo is another in a succession of internet companies that have sought to disrupt traditional TV-watching. Many of the others have been sued out of existence; and Aereo has said it is anticipating a legal challenge and has a theory to get around the copyright issue.

via Broadcasters Sue To Stop $12 Streaming Service Aereo | paidContent.

A MythTV box with an HDTV card can do this too without the monthly charge.

cobbler

Cobbler is a Linux installation server that allows for rapid setup of network installation environments. It glues together and automates many associated Linux tasks so you do not have to hop between lots of various commands and applications when rolling out new systems, and, in some cases, changing existing ones.

With a simple series of commands, network installs can be configured for PXE, reinstallations, media-based net-installs, and virtualized installs (supporting Xen, qemu, KVM, and some variants of VMware). Cobbler uses a helper program called ‘koan’ (which interacts with Cobbler) for reinstallation and virtualization support.

via cobbler.