Project Natick seeks to understand the benefits and difficulties in deploying subsea datacenters worldwide. We did so by designing, building, and deploying our own subsea datacenter in the ocean, all in about a year. This is the story of the Leona Philpot and Project Natick.
What is Project Natick?
Project
Natick is a Microsoft research project to manufacture and operate an
underwater datacenter. The initial experimental prototype vessel,
christened the Leona Philpot after a popular Xbox game character,
was operated on the seafloor approximately one kilometer off the
Pacific coast of the United States from August to November of 2015.
Project Natick reflects Microsoft’s ongoing quest for cloud datacenter
solutions that offer rapid provisioning, lower costs, high
responsiveness, and are more environmentally sustainable.
Why Project Natick?
What are the customer benefits of Project Natick?
How would a Natick datacenter impact the environment?
- Cloud computing continues to grow in importance, both as a driver of economic growth and as a consumer of global resources.
- Project Natick is focused on a cloud future that can help better serve customers in areas which are near large bodies of water (where nearly 50% of society resides). The vision of operating containerized datacenters offshore near major population centers anticipates a highly interactive future requiring data resources located close to users. Deepwater deployment offers ready access to cooling, renewable power sources, and a controlled environment.
- Rapid provisioning: Ability to deploy a datacenter from start to finish in 90 days.
- Enables rapid response to market demand, quick deployment for natural disasters and special events such as World Cup.
- Latency: Latency is how long it takes data to travel between its source and destination. Half of the world’s population lives within 200 km of the ocean so placing datacenters offshore increases the proximity of the datacenter to the population dramatically reducing latency and providing better responsiveness.
We aspire to create a sustainable
datacenter which leverages locally produced green energy, providing
customers with additional options to meet their own sustainability
requirements.
- Natick datacenters are envisioned to be fully recycled. Made from recycled material which in turn is recycled at the end of life of the datacenter.
- A Natick datacenter co-located with offshore renewable energy sources could be truly zero emission: no waste products, whether due to the power generation, computers, or human maintainers are emitted into the environment.
- With the end of Moore’s Law, the cadence at which servers are refreshed with new and improved hardware in the datacenter is likely to slow significantly. We see this as an opportunity to field long-lived, resilient datacenters that operate “lights out” – nobody on site – with very high reliability for the entire life of the deployment, possibly as long as 10 years.
- Natick datacenters consume no water for cooling or any other purpose.
When will Natick datacenters be more widely available in a product?
Project
Natick is currently at the research stage. It’s still early days in
evaluating whether this concept could be adopted by Microsoft and other
cloud service providers.
How long is it designed to last down there?
A
Natick datacenter deployment is intended to last up to 5 years, which
is the anticipated lifespan of the computers contained within. After
each 5-year deployment cycle, the datacenter would be retrieved,
reloaded with new computers, and redeployed. The target lifespan of a
Natick datacenter is at least 20 years. After that, the datacenter is
designed to be retrieved and recycled.
What does the name Natick mean?
Natick is a codename and carries no special meaning. It is a town in Massachusetts.
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