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Facebook to build massive Arctic data centre in Sweden
by Staff Writers
Stockholm (AFP) Oct 27, 2011


Facebook announced Thursday that it would immediately begin building a massive data centre -- its third globally and first in Europe -- in the Swedish town of Luleaa, near the Arctic Circle.

"After a rigorous review process of sites across Europe, we concluded that Luleaa offered the best package of resources, including a suitable climate for environmental cooling (and) clean power resources," said the world's largest social media site, which counts more than 800 million users worldwide.

The icy region was especially attractive due to its cool climate, "since cooling servers is a major issue for data centres," Facebook said, adding Luleaa also fulfilled its requirement that the data centre primarily run on renewable hydropower.

"Thanks to our main river Lule river, we can guarantee this," Luleaa mayor Karl Petersen said in the statement, pointing out that the river supplied Sweden with nine percent of its electricity.

The Luleaa data centre will consist of three server buildings each covering an area of around 28,000 square metres (300,000 square feet), Facebook said, adding that construction would begin immediately.

The first building would be open for business within a year, it said, while the entire data centre was expected to be up and running by 2014.

"About 300 full-time positions will be required during the first three years," Facebook said, without revealing how much the construction was expected to cost.

Swedish Enterprise Minister Annie Loeoef meanwhile announced that the government would help subsidise the new data centre, pumping in 103 million kronor (11.4 million euors, $16 million).

"The investment in a data centre will give the area expertise in a future growth industry and, not least with the proximity to the Luleaa Technical University, will create possibilities for more companies and activities in the region going forward," she said in a statement.

Mayor Petersen meanwhile said the facility would help turn the Luleaa region into a major node for European data traffic, dubbing the region "The Node Pole".

"We hope other global companies see the innate climate qualities and benefits of the Node Pole region, and choose to follow in Facebook's path," he said.

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Wireless demand to outstrip capacity?
San Diego (UPI) Oct 26, 2011 - Wireless use in the United States is growing and threatens to outstrip infrastructure capacity and cause congestion, researchers say.

Researchers at the University of California, San Diego are warning of a "disconnect" between U.S. wireless infrastructure capacity and consumer demand that could lead to dropped connections and slow downloads.

"We're currently experiencing a mass migration from wired networks to wireless networks, which under the best of circumstances have far less capacity," researcher Michael Kleeman said in a university release Wednesday.

Wireless is much more convenient than wired connections for many purposes, but "we must understand and accept the trade-offs we will face for the convenience of accessing limited wireless capacity," he said.

Even with advanced wireless technology, the capacity available to all network users in a given cell can be less than 1/1000th the capacity of a fiber-optic thread, researchers said.

And increasing use of mobile video will be a major source of growing demand for wireless capacity, they said.

"There is a lot of discussion about supply-demand issues for broadband Internet, but soon the same questions will be considerably more acute for wireless," said Roger Bohn, director of the Global Information Industry Center at UC San Diego. "This report shows why future wireless systems will require adjustments, of one kind or another."



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INTERNET SPACE
'Rogue websites' bill introduced in US House
Washington (AFP) Oct 26, 2011
US lawmakers introduced a bill on Wednesday that would give US authorities more tools to crack down on websites accused of piracy of movies, television shows and music and the sale of counterfeit goods. The Stop Online Piracy Act has received bipartisan support in the House of Representatives and is the House version of a bill introduced in the Senate in May known as the Theft of Intellectua ... read more


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