DISSOLVED CLOUDS: ERICSSON'S VAUDREUIL DATA CENTRE AND INFRASTRUCTURAL ABANDONMENT

Author(s):  
Julia Velkova ◽  
Patrick Brodie

The past decade has seen the accelerated growth and expansion of large-scale data centre operations across the world to support emerging consumer and business data and computation needs. These buildings, as infrastructures responsive to changing global economic and technological terrain, are increasingly modular, and must be built out rapidly. However, these conditions also mean that their paths to obsolescence are shortened, their lifespans dependent on shifting corporate strategies and advances in consumer technology. This paper theorises and empirically explores material, infrastructural abandonment that emerges in this process of data centre construction across different geographical contexts. To do so, we analyse the socio-material construction of an international network of large-scale data centres by global telecom giant Ericsson, and the abrupt abandonment and suspension of one of its nodes in Vaudreuil, Québec in 2017 after only nine months of operation. Employing autoethnography, site visits, and qualitative interviews with data centre architects and staff in Sweden and Canada, we argue that the ruins of abandoned 'cloud' infrastructure represent the disjunction between the 'promise' of digital infrastructure for local communities and the market interests of digital companies. With its focus, the paper takes ruination and discard as perspectives through which to understand the complexity of emergent datafied futures and the socio-technical reshaping of internet infrastructures.

Author(s):  
Oshin Sharma ◽  
Anusha S.

The emerging trends in fog computing have increased the interests and focus in both industry and academia. Fog computing extends cloud computing facilities like the storage, networking, and computation towards the edge of networks wherein it offloads the cloud data centres and reduces the latency of providing services to the users. This paradigm is like cloud in terms of data, storage, application, and computation services, except with a fundamental difference: it is decentralized. Furthermore, these fog systems can process huge amounts of data locally and can be installed on hardware of different types. These characteristics make fog suitable for time- and location-based applications like internet of things (IoT) devices which can process large amounts of data. In this chapter, the authors present fog data streaming, its architecture, and various applications.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Simone Rossi Tisbeni ◽  
Daniele CESINI ◽  
Barbara Martelli ◽  
Arianna Carbone ◽  
Claudia Cavallaro ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 86 ◽  
pp. 995-1007 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bin Wang ◽  
Chao Chen ◽  
Ligang He ◽  
Bo Gao ◽  
Jiadong Ren ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Giannis Drossis ◽  
Chryssi Birliraki ◽  
Nikolaos Patsiouras ◽  
George Margetis ◽  
Constantine Stephanidis

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