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FARVEL BIG TECH
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  3. My first job was building out the first mega-datacenters.

My first job was building out the first mega-datacenters.

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  • cwebber@social.coopC cwebber@social.coop

    My first job was building out the first mega-datacenters. 2005-2007, I was a datacenter assistant monkey working from Google working somewhere in the Chicago suburbs, swapping out hard drives and ram and writing shell scripts, as myself and my friends unknowingly laid down the prototype for the kinds of datacenters we all see today.

    And so it is with some significant expertise that I say:

    Fuck datacenters. Datacenters are an anti-pattern.

    gkrnours@mastodon.gamedev.placeG This user is from outside of this forum
    gkrnours@mastodon.gamedev.placeG This user is from outside of this forum
    gkrnours@mastodon.gamedev.place
    wrote sidst redigeret af
    #49

    @cwebber datacenter bad, colocation good

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    • cwebber@social.coopC cwebber@social.coop

      @farfalk Datacenters are concentrations of power. Anytime a datacenter is involved, it's a sign of power centralization. The rise of datacenters corresponds with the death of p2p and other visions of a more decentralized internet.

      martyfouts@mastodon.onlineM This user is from outside of this forum
      martyfouts@mastodon.onlineM This user is from outside of this forum
      martyfouts@mastodon.online
      wrote sidst redigeret af
      #50

      @cwebber @farfalk Taking the long view, it’s the return of the data center coupled with public access and it is part of a swing between centralization and distribution of computers that dates to the 1960s.

      The essential tension driving this is economy of scale versus localization of control. Before the PC it was departmental computing versus corporate control of resources.

      I think data centers can serve a useful purpose but the pendulum has swung too far.

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      • valpackett@social.treehouse.systemsV valpackett@social.treehouse.systems

        @thomasjwebb @raven667 @cwebber @farfalk exactly! where we're going we don't need websites, we must abandon the concepts that require single-point-of-failure "hosting" because that is not viable in a local-first world.

        thomasjwebb@mastodon.socialT This user is from outside of this forum
        thomasjwebb@mastodon.socialT This user is from outside of this forum
        thomasjwebb@mastodon.social
        wrote sidst redigeret af
        #51

        @raven667 @valpackett @farfalk @cwebber yeah I don’t want to force normal people to be sysadmins. Maybe some sysadmining can be like a public service so everyone gets free static web hosting. But no server should be needed to send messages, comment, etc.

        raven667@hachyderm.ioR 1 Reply Last reply
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        • johns@social.librem.oneJ johns@social.librem.one

          @cwebber @farfalk I think it more corresponds to the death of personal computing as it was? People don't have desktops anymore and barely have laptops other than for work? Which is a problem for p2p? Seems like most people's decentralized/federated nodes for things are hosted in data centers? All question marks because just speculating.

          tychi@merveilles.townT This user is from outside of this forum
          tychi@merveilles.townT This user is from outside of this forum
          tychi@merveilles.town
          wrote sidst redigeret af
          #52

          @johns @cwebber @farfalk

          There’s a difference between paying for a VM in a server rack and every server rack in a building the size of a city being a single VM, in essence, and in truth.

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          • cwebber@social.coopC cwebber@social.coop

            @farfalk Datacenters are concentrations of power. Anytime a datacenter is involved, it's a sign of power centralization. The rise of datacenters corresponds with the death of p2p and other visions of a more decentralized internet.

            sombragris@mastodon.faithtree.socialS This user is from outside of this forum
            sombragris@mastodon.faithtree.socialS This user is from outside of this forum
            sombragris@mastodon.faithtree.social
            wrote sidst redigeret af
            #53

            @cwebber @farfalk
            And I'd add the obvious. Not exactly the death itself, but a systematic effort directed against, personal computing.

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            • reinald@nrw.socialR reinald@nrw.social

              @mirabilos @thomasjwebb @cwebber I love it. Put some powerful blade system like a cisco UCS, some storage system and a small tape library, and you are ready for allmost everything. For some more complex network setups a dedicated load balancer might be useful. But you can build so crazy powerful stuff in two full racks...

              mirabilos@toot.mirbsd.orgM This user is from outside of this forum
              mirabilos@toot.mirbsd.orgM This user is from outside of this forum
              mirabilos@toot.mirbsd.org
              wrote sidst redigeret af
              #54

              @Reinald @thomasjwebb @cwebber eh, my needs are much lower. At this point in time, I have:

              • a computer from the last millennium as main server at home, not public-facing, but fixed IP
              • a dedicated server from the early 2000s which still works, at hoster A currently in France
              • two rather tiny VMs with annoyingly slow storage at hoster B in Germany
              • a slightly beefier VM with SSD-backed storage at nominally hoster A but probably really the american company who bought them but still in a data centre in France
              • a VM on my gf’s dedicated server at mass hoster C in Germany, which is my backup server (currently restic), deliberately IPv6-only
              • domains at hoster D in Germany, but the nameservers are among those systems listed above
              • an old computer from my former employer, with two new HDDs, on the consumer DSL at home, as copy of the backup storage and also occasional build server, etc.
              • so far one “pihole” (really AdGuard Home atm), will need to set up a second
              • laptops
              • SPARCstations

              This gives me geographic split into at least two operating and two backup sites. I don’t have the need for that much oomph at any given single site but like the redundancy (I also (had to… forgot a LUKS password…) tested restore, half an hour and the VM was back up). Recovery for a lost site would take longer due to changing IPs, but still possible with low enough data loss, but definitely still annoying of course.

              I also need to move some things around and set up OpenVPN (likely classical server-clients star layout, even if mesh would be nicer here) so they have fixed IPv6 “among each other”, currently backing up those behind consumer or roadwarrior connections is done with SSH forwarding, which is annoying, and LUKS unlock at boot also needs IPv6 (wrote the initramfs glue for that myself, as the existing v4 support fails for the v6-only box and one of the others due to networking irregularities). Ideally, this can also give me v6 on the laptop at sites lacking it. For this, I need to set up a CA first… *sigh…* (existing ones were just made unusable) I need more spoons.

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              • cwebber@social.coopC cwebber@social.coop

                My first job was building out the first mega-datacenters. 2005-2007, I was a datacenter assistant monkey working from Google working somewhere in the Chicago suburbs, swapping out hard drives and ram and writing shell scripts, as myself and my friends unknowingly laid down the prototype for the kinds of datacenters we all see today.

                And so it is with some significant expertise that I say:

                Fuck datacenters. Datacenters are an anti-pattern.

                A This user is from outside of this forum
                A This user is from outside of this forum
                adisonverlice@tweesecake.social
                wrote sidst redigeret af
                #55

                @cwebber get off the internet ,you're on a data center somewhere! get off get off get off get off the rat poison is about to strike it's a data center there's data center rats no no no nononononononononononononononononononononononono you need to hide right now now now now now now now now now now now

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                • cwebber@social.coopC cwebber@social.coop

                  My first job was building out the first mega-datacenters. 2005-2007, I was a datacenter assistant monkey working from Google working somewhere in the Chicago suburbs, swapping out hard drives and ram and writing shell scripts, as myself and my friends unknowingly laid down the prototype for the kinds of datacenters we all see today.

                  And so it is with some significant expertise that I say:

                  Fuck datacenters. Datacenters are an anti-pattern.

                  Z This user is from outside of this forum
                  Z This user is from outside of this forum
                  zygmyd@toot.cat
                  wrote sidst redigeret af
                  #56

                  @cwebber

                  Nosily, did your time in Chicago overlap the start of EH and QB clusters?

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                  • foolishowl@social.coopF This user is from outside of this forum
                    foolishowl@social.coopF This user is from outside of this forum
                    foolishowl@social.coop
                    wrote sidst redigeret af
                    #57

                    @rl_dane @cwebber @mirabilos Here's a completely unrelated bit of history.

                    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sitdown_strike

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                    • mirabilos@toot.mirbsd.orgM This user is from outside of this forum
                      mirabilos@toot.mirbsd.orgM This user is from outside of this forum
                      mirabilos@toot.mirbsd.org
                      wrote sidst redigeret af
                      #58

                      @rl_dane @cwebber

                      I cannot imagine what modern datacenters must be like.

                      Cold, and loud enough you’d need ear protection by law, at least in the actual server rooms. Artificial lighting only, of course, even if it’s above-ground. And security to fear, even if [sometimes duck-tried (Thread)].

                      That’s modern as in before 2019.

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                      • cwebber@social.coopC cwebber@social.coop

                        My first job was building out the first mega-datacenters. 2005-2007, I was a datacenter assistant monkey working from Google working somewhere in the Chicago suburbs, swapping out hard drives and ram and writing shell scripts, as myself and my friends unknowingly laid down the prototype for the kinds of datacenters we all see today.

                        And so it is with some significant expertise that I say:

                        Fuck datacenters. Datacenters are an anti-pattern.

                        S This user is from outside of this forum
                        S This user is from outside of this forum
                        savera@mastodon.sdf.org
                        wrote sidst redigeret af
                        #59

                        @cwebber Data centers will be around till someone writes software making AI computation in a distributed fashion.

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                        0
                        • thomasjwebb@mastodon.socialT thomasjwebb@mastodon.social

                          @raven667 @valpackett @farfalk @cwebber yeah I don’t want to force normal people to be sysadmins. Maybe some sysadmining can be like a public service so everyone gets free static web hosting. But no server should be needed to send messages, comment, etc.

                          raven667@hachyderm.ioR This user is from outside of this forum
                          raven667@hachyderm.ioR This user is from outside of this forum
                          raven667@hachyderm.io
                          wrote sidst redigeret af
                          #60

                          @thomasjwebb @valpackett @farfalk @cwebber apparently I missed it but there was a version of Opera that had a built in webserver in the browser with some dynamic DNS or something so you could host from your personal computer. Maybe Vivaldi can resurrect the concept.

                          I mentioned Cobalt though because it was a self contained server designed for mortals to manage, its possible to have mail, chat, web as a drop in product, its been done. Unfortunately Sun bought it but the forward thinking VP who did so got pushed out, the rest of Sun wasn't interested, and that company is dead dreaming

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                          • cwebber@social.coopC cwebber@social.coop

                            @thomasjwebb I've been meaning to write a blogpost for a long time. Sounds like it's time to write it!

                            jdp23@neuromatch.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
                            jdp23@neuromatch.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
                            jdp23@neuromatch.social
                            wrote sidst redigeret af
                            #61

                            Please do!
                            @cwebber @thomasjwebb

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                            0
                            • cwebber@social.coopC cwebber@social.coop

                              My first job was building out the first mega-datacenters. 2005-2007, I was a datacenter assistant monkey working from Google working somewhere in the Chicago suburbs, swapping out hard drives and ram and writing shell scripts, as myself and my friends unknowingly laid down the prototype for the kinds of datacenters we all see today.

                              And so it is with some significant expertise that I say:

                              Fuck datacenters. Datacenters are an anti-pattern.

                              dibi58@this.mouse.rocksD This user is from outside of this forum
                              dibi58@this.mouse.rocksD This user is from outside of this forum
                              dibi58@this.mouse.rocks
                              wrote sidst redigeret af
                              #62

                              @cwebber

                              there is this character/mask of turin, part of the commedy of art, name is gianduia (which is also as gianduiotto a typical candy) ...

                              he is famous for hiding money in somebody elses pockets ...

                              i think of it every time i hear the word cloud ...
                              🤣

                              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gianduja_(commedia_dell'arte)

                              1 Reply Last reply
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                              • farfalk@toot.communityF farfalk@toot.community

                                @cwebber that's an interesting point of view. I mean, of course the current datacenter craze is complete madness, but it seems you consider an anti-pattern the concept of datacenter itself. Why is it so? What do you suggest as an alternate solution to the problems data centers try to solve?

                                tyil@fedi.tyil.nlT This user is from outside of this forum
                                tyil@fedi.tyil.nlT This user is from outside of this forum
                                tyil@fedi.tyil.nl
                                wrote sidst redigeret af
                                #63
                                @farfalk@toot.community @cwebber@social.coop
                                What do you suggest as an alternate solution to the problems data centers try to solve?
                                What actual problems do data centers inherently solve to begin with?
                                1 Reply Last reply
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                                • pelle@veganism.socialP pelle@veganism.social shared this topic
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