Cisco Puts UCS Into Portable Data Centre

Cisco’s modular data centre, promised a year ago, is designed for remote military and scientific processing

Cisco Systems famously shut down one of its businesses recently when it closed the Flip camera operation, but it is also expanding in other sectors – namely, the data centre arena.

Now the Internet networking giant is moving its Unified Computing System, or UCS, into the portable container data centre market, similar to what IBM, the former Sun Microsystems (now part of Oracle), Hewlett-Packard, Dell-Microsoft and SGI (formerly Rackable) have been doing for the last seven or eight years.

Public and private sector

On 2 May the company said it has now made available the Cisco Containerised Data Centre as an alternative to address the computing and networking needs of both public and private sector organisations. This intended development was first announced in March 2010.

This gives Cisco another way to sell its UCS – a pre-configured IT hardware and software package upon which the company has been banking heavily to expand its market reach. The UCS’ network-centric data centre infrastructure authorises partners such as EMC, BMC, NetApp, VMware and Intel to provide components that Cisco does not make.

These portable data centres come in standard 40 by 8 feet and smaller-size 20 by 8 feet shipping containers for transport on ships and trucks. All the necessary servers, storage and networking equipment are crammed into these containers; all that’s needed on location are electrical power and cooling-fluid sources.

The Containerised Data Centre provides an enclosure for each of its 16 racks. The chilled liquid cooling system enables each rack to be assigned different operational temperatures and thresholds.

HP and Oracle Sun make both 20- and 40-foot models; the others are generally focused on the full-sizers.

Mostly Used for Remote Military, Science Projects

Generally, portable data centres are deployed for work done by military, science and high-performance enterprises. The frames and shells are very rugged and temperature-proof; some are being used in hot climates, such as the Middle East, and in hard-to-reach locations, such as oil and gas exploration locations. Some are used on ocean-going research vessels.

Designed and manufactured in the United States, the Cisco Containerised Data Centre is a modular data centre solution in a weatherised ISO container that offers an open architecture and transportable platform coupled with a unique management platform for cost-effective data centre deployments.

Cisco claims that by purchasing a portable data centre – which costs around $1.2 million (£720,000) for a 40-foot, fully loaded model and some $600,000 for a 20-footer – an enterprise can save 50 percent in capital expenses and 30 percent in operating expenses compared with a similar-sized, permanent land-based facility. Those are very generalised numbers, however.