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Home » Facebook and Google Agree on 48v Open Rack Standard Architecture

Facebook and Google Agree on 48v Open Rack Standard Architecture

August 4, 2016
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Google and Facebook have collaborated on an Open Rack v2.0 Standard, which specifies a 48V power architecture with a modular, shallow-depth form factor that enables high-density deployment of Open Compute Platform (OCP) racks into data centers with limited space.

In a blog posting, Google’s Debosmita Das and Mike Lau note that Google developed and has extensively deployed a 48V ecosystem with payloads utilizing 48V to Point-of-Load technology in its data centers since 2010.  Google said its experience with 48v has resulted in a significant reduction in losses and increased efficiency compared to 12V solutions, thereby saving millions of dollars and kilowatt hours.

https://cloudplatform.googleblog.com/

Here’s what Happened at Open Compute Project Summit

Wednesday, March 09, 2016  #OCPSummit, Data Center, Facebook, Google, Intel, Microsoft, OCP  10 Comments

In the five years since its launch, the Open Compute Project (OCP) has chalked up dozens of innovations and technical specification contributions that have been implemented by hyperscale data center operators. The ambitions have now expanded beyond rack hardware to include switching, storage, silicon photonics,  a telemetry framework, an open-source analytics platform and new domain of solutions adapted for telecom operators. Here are some…

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