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Portable Modular Data Center

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A 40-foot Portable Modular Data Center on display.

A Portable Modular Data Center (PMDC) is a type of modular data center designed for portability. PMDCs are typically built into 20, 40, or 53-foot intermodal containers (shipping containers). Designed to be weather-resistant and well insulated, PMDCs can be placed in many environments.[1] They can be stored and then deployed when needed to augment traditional data centers or provide backup functionality in the event of a disaster.

Portable Modular Data Centers are often used for edge computing applications such as 4G and 5G broadband cellular network deployments.[2] This is because PMDCs are comparatively easy to deploy and they are able to provide service at a lower latency due to their physical proximity to customers.

Design

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A typical Portable Modular Data Center includes a diesel generator for power, servers, and other computing resources, along with cooling units to manage the heat from high-density computing. PMDCs also feature internet connectivity, often through satellite uplinks.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Delivering rapid deployment of a complete, turn-key modular data center to support your unique business objectives
  2. ^ "Modular Data Centers: When They Work, and When They Don't". Data Center Knowledge | News and analysis for the data center industry. 2024-01-25. Retrieved 2024-04-29.
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