Data Center Flood Captured By Security Cam 66
miller60 writes "Torrential rains last week in Istanbul led to a flood that overwhelmed a data center for Vodafone. The event was captured on the data center security cameras, which shows waters rising and then raging through the security area before flooding the raised-floor equipment area."
Oops! (Score:2)
Computer says... (Score:1)
wowzers (Score:2)
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The perils of cloud computing...
Now featureing (Score:3, Funny)
It's funny 'cause... (Score:3, Interesting)
"voda" means water in a few languages.
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Like screen doors on a submarine.
Glass doors and panels are designed withstand some wind and water but never this much mater. Standing water pressure is one thing but flood waters are moving so the extra pressure on the glass and frame they didn't anticipate must have collapsed the glass & frame and they still had street traffic which didn't help any.
I don't know what building standards they have in Istanbul Turkey and what flood risk information they had before building this data center but obviously t
Ooozing sympathy ... (Score:4, Interesting)
Leaving aside that this looks like a pretty anonymous security desk/ reception area which could fron any sort of business, not just a data centre, the important point is, "what a fucking stupid place to build anything".
You can see from the window that this sort of flooding is nothing to be surprised at. The water is rising slowly and there's little apparent current, which implies that the site is a fair distance from the source of the rising river. Odds on, this is not a "flash flood", but a perfectly normal flood on the flood plain of a river.
Rivers flood ; they flood onto their flood plains ; floods can be avoided by the simple process of not being where the water ends up. I.E. don't stay on flood plains when there's significant rainfall.
OK, so people who have brought property on flood plains don't like this because they're going to lose money ; a lot of money. But that's their own fault for being so stupid as to invest in property on a flood plain.
No fucking sympathy at all. Let the stupid bastards drown as they go bankrupt.
I was on holiday recently in Mallorca, and also looking at photos of other firend's holidays in Spain. Where other people see a nice wide park area running through the middle of a town, with a tiny stream in a broad concrete channel, they see a public park. But I see a flood channel designed to take flash flooding. Same landscape, different perceptions.
Last month, we had the worst local rainfall for over 30 years (I've only lived here for 26 years). The rain was hammering down solidly for nearly 3 days ; the ignition leads in my car started complaining. And the drains outside my house overflowed ... and the water ran away downhill to cause flooding on the flood plain at the bottom of the hill. Well, that was a really difficult decision for me to make when I was house hunting, and it's paid off time and again already.
Learn some basic geography ; look at the shape of the landscape determined by the average climate of the last few thousand years. Then apply what you've learned and let someone else suffer the flooding.
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Leaving aside that this looks like a pretty anonymous security desk/ reception area which could fron any sort of business
It is clearly not in America - there are no supersized tubs of lard in shot.
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I largely agree. When we moved to Texas, my wife wanted a house by a creek. Everything we looked at was built above the flood line, but by quick inspection I could see which houses were going to be undermined by repeated flooding of their creeks. (For some houses the "upper" backyards were already peeling away.)
Once we moved into a place (with a very solid retaining wall just where it needs to be) I had to convince my wife that we shouldn't put in benches or swing sets in the "lower" back yard. She thou
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It is not exactly rocket surgery, is it? Or even "brain science".
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It is not exactly rocket surgery, is it? Or even "brain science".
Indeed, it is not. And so, as politically incorrect as it may be, I sometimes question the wisdom of rebuilding a city that is largely below the water line of a huge river.
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What's politically incorrect about it?
I can see that it would be politically incorrect to say that it's stupid to rebuild this city but not stupid to rebuild that city, when the only significant difference is the countries that they're in.
So, as a geologist (not that that matters much), I've always been happy to snort contempt at the London Barrage, and I s
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I feel the sympathy that you ooze. Have you found a good viewpoint where you can park up, crack a few tinnies and observe the bedraggled evacuees from a position of calculated safety? Free entertainment.
Hey - an investment opportunity : find such a site, buy the appropriate few 10s of sq.m, then charge rental for the film crews when they come along.
What's the rest
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Other methods of making profit:
1. Charge reservations. Want a dedicated spot for your film crew when the floods happen next year? Pay me $x
2. Charge for advertising space. Want to advertise your construction business? Pay me $x
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You're clearly a lot more experienced than me at this ruthless capitalism lark. Would you like some freshly-sliced peon with your paupers-blood cocktail?
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Or at very least, don't build your data center on the ground floor in an area prone to flooding.
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I beg to differ on the current. If you look at the buildup of the water on the door and window supports, it looks like there's at least half a foot of pileup due to water velocity. There are some pulsating waves so you know it's not just head difference between inside and outside. That water appears to be moving a couple of feet per second, especially after the breakthroughs. It's not a seeping flood, they're getting real velocity.
I don't think I've ever heard of flood water velocity as a measure of dis
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Leaving aside that this looks like a pretty anonymous security desk/ reception area ...
I take it you didn't watch the entire clip. Jump to near the end and you can see the feed from a different camera. This one covers the actual data centre.
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Isn't it funny how everyone wants the best property, but only some people end up having it?
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Seriously, did you watch the first 10 seconds of the video and come to your conclusion based on the fact that your car got rained on? You can see water rushing into the room from the hall. This is inside a building, I can't imagine how fast the water must have been moving outside.
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It sounds as if you know the area well enough to have identified it - I don't recall the original article having enough information to locate it more precisely than "Istanbul", at which point I only have a very vague idea of the topography.
So, there's something more complex going on in this particular case than simply being sited in a flood plain - which does nothing to m
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I fortunately do not live near to that flood area but the place was on my way from home to work. I was lucky that my car was diesel during the event, otherwise it was very possible to stuck in sub floods feeding the main "river" that materialized. Aside from political bickering between municipality officers and all related offices, that area IS IN a valley. Albeit it is not a deep one and it is higher than most of surrounding area, valleys are by definition prune to be flooded. That
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So ... detecting that a location is in a valley is ... rocket science? Difficult?
An excellent place to put flooding-tolerant crops. Data centres are not, to the best of my knowledge, flooding-tolerant crops.
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Some degree of culpability - quite a lot - attaches to the morons who do not do due diligence before buying (or leasing) premises. Of course, if more of the morons refused to buy such shit, then fewer people would try such scams, because they'd know they might get stuck with an unsalable lemon ...
Oh, who're we trying to kid? Idiots will continue to lose large amounts of money and occa
Boring... (Score:1)
Man, that was boring. No sea-monsters attacking unsuspecting techs and no tidal waves toppling racks of computers. I think there should be something to balance the ax-murder scene. Don't you?
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don't worry (Score:1)
Don't worry
Its standard procedure when dealing with 'lp0 printer on fire!' errors
Overflowed Toilet... (Score:1)
Ok who dropped a cherry bomb in the toilet at the data center?
Furniture (Score:3, Funny)
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Wood chips, some glue, lots of air, coated with a thin layer of plastic. A cookie floats. Would you build a life raft out of cookies?
That sounds like a delicious raft.
So close, yet so far (Score:2)
I think the funniest part of that video is at 5:25 where the cabinet falls over that the guy had tried putting things on top of earlier to save them...
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I think the funniest part of that video is at 5:25 where the cabinet falls over that the guy had tried putting things on top of earlier to save them...
I started laughing when he was trying to save the contents of what looks like a cash drawer, but ends up dumping the thing over in the water. It just needed the yackety sax music from Benny Hill dubbing over it.
Electrical!? (Score:2)
The location is... (Score:2)
Move the cursor around the highway's region and watch the altitude info in Google Earth and you'll see the highway is a low point. The flood followed the
Day-um!! (Score:2)
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I wouldn't mind seeing it. Just not paying the bill. Also, if it is anything like the US they just made it on a 'do not insure' list...
DNS Error..... (Score:2)
Error "GOD": Server Under Water.
Water + Electricity = (Score:2)
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