Google: From 112 Servers to a $5B-Plus Quarterly Data Center Bill
Hölzle reveals company’s largest server order ever: 1,680 servers in 1999
It was only 15 years ago that Google was running on slightly more than 100 servers, stacked in racks Sergey Brin and Larry Page put together themselves using cheap parts – including insulating corkboard pads – to cut down the cost of their search engine infrastructure.
That do-it-yourself ethos has stayed with the company to this day, albeit it is now applied at much bigger scale.
Google data centers cost the company more than $5 billion in the second quarter of 2014, according to its most recent quarterly earnings, reported earlier this month. The company spent $2.65 billion on data center construction, real estate purchases and production equipment, and somewhat south of $2.82 billion on running its massive infrastructure.
The $2.82 billion figure is the size of the “other cost of revenue” bucket the company includes its data center operational expenses in. The bucket includes other things, such as hardware inventory costs and amortization of assets Google inherits with acquisitions. The size of this bucket in the second quarter represented 18 percent of the company’s revenue for that quarter. It was 17 percent of revenue in the second quarter of last year.
Google’s largest server order ever
While the amount of money Google spends on infrastructure is astronomically higher than the amount it spent 15 years ago, the company makes much more money per server today than it did back then.
“In retrospect, the design of the [“corkboard”] racks wasn’t optimized for reliability and serviceability, but given that we only had two weeks to design them, and not much money to spend, things worked out fine,” Urs Hölzle, Google’s vice president for technical infrastructure, wrote in a Google Plus post today.