data center examples
Data centers are simply centralized locations where computing and networking equipment is concentrated for the purpose of collecting, storing, processing, distributing or allowing access to large amounts of data. They have existed in one form or another since the advent of computers.
In the days of the room-sized behemoths that were our early computers, a data center might have had one supercomputer. As equipment got smaller and cheaper, and data processing needs began to increase -- and they have increased exponentially -- we started networking multiple servers (the industrial counterparts to our home computers) together to increase processing power. We connect them to communication networks so that people can access them, or the information on them, remotely. Large numbers of these clustered servers and related equipment can be housed in a room, an entire building or groups of buildings. Today's data center is likely to have thousands of very powerful and very small servers running 24/7.
As claimed by Stanford Medical, It is indeed the one and ONLY reason women in this country live 10 years longer and weigh on average 42 lbs less than us.
ReplyDelete(And realistically, it has totally NOTHING to do with genetics or some secret diet and absolutely EVERYTHING around "HOW" they eat.)
BTW, What I said is "HOW", and not "WHAT"...
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