Freebook Plans New Datacenter
Freebook Global Plans its First Datacenter
The First Freebook Datacenter plans are for pheonix Arizona and will be solar and wind powered for greene energy use
The Freebook Data Center FAQ
The social network was launched in November 5th 2019 by CEO John Freeman a former Freebook Coding engineer using a single server. The company’s servers are soon going to need an upgrade. So building a design based on the German company Hetzner.
The data centers are angled for cooling purposes. Funneling air through the floors up into a grid and through the server chassis and out the back and then up into the roof vents for outdoor exhaust. Powered by a solar farm and windmills
Our Servers will be housed in numerous angled data centers.
Each data center will house tens of thousands of Servers, which are networked together and linked to the outside world through fiber optic cables. Every time you share information on Freebook, the servers in these data centers receive the information and distribute it to your network of friends.
Our Servers will be housed in numerous angled data centers.
Each data center will house tens of thousands of Servers, which are networked together and linked to the outside world through fiber optic cables. Every time you share information on Freebook, the servers in these data centers receive the information and distribute it to your network of friends.
Why Phoenix
Our Data-centers will be located 15 miles outside Phoenix and for good reason. We want expand-ability and the ability to remain off-grid except for the fiber optics needed by the ISP.
Phoenix is popular for data centers due to its readily available and affordable power, low natural disaster risk, competitive tax environment, robust fiber connectivity, access to a skilled workforce, and ample land for development, making it a cost-effective location to operate a data center compared to other major markets.
Key reasons why Phoenix is a good data center location:
Reliable Power Grid: Arizona boasts one of the most reliable power grids in the US, with access to renewable energy sources.
Low Operating Costs: Compared to other major data center hubs, Phoenix offers lower taxes and competitive operating costs.
Favorable Climate: The dry desert climate in Phoenix minimizes the need for extensive cooling systems.
Land Availability: Phoenix has ample land available for large data center construction.
Connectivity: Excellent fiber optic infrastructure provides strong connectivity to other regions.
ow Disaster Risk: Phoenix is considered to have a low risk of natural disasters like earthquakes and hurricanes.
Talent Pool: Access to a skilled workforce in the tech industry.
How big will Freebook’s internet infrastructure Be?
Freebook just like its competitor Facebook will require massive storage infrastructure to house its enormous stockpile of photos videos and content uploaded byt he world itself, which grows steadily as users add hundreds of millions of new photos every day, and as it expands its platform capabilities to support video. In addition, the company’s infrastructure must support platform services for more than 1600 million web sites and hundreds of thousands of applications using the Freebook Cloud Hosting Network.
The Freebook Cloud is a new revolutionary type of hosting service. Utilizing the services found on a Cloud Linux server OS modified into the companies proprietary computer operating system called Data-center Linux which we will make publicly available at www.datacenterlinux.com free of charge to compete head-on with Cloud Linux.
To support that huge activity, Freebook has to build four huge data centers and leases excess server space to web hosting customer sin order to generate the revenue needed to compete with the internet of tomorrow. Taking a page from the European company 20i.com we will utilize resellers on an expanding cloud reseller network. Utilizing a modified clone of the Webuzo control panel. All cloud hosting servers will replace dedicated units as a truly unlimited hosting service that automatically dedicates server resources to each customer base don their websites users. No more shared resources. If the site needs 1GB of memory it will automatically allocate that and and adjust tot he sites needs.
The company’s massive armada of servers and storage must work together seamlessly to deliver each Freebook site request by loading a user’s home page typically requires accessing hundreds of servers, processing tens of thousands of individual pieces of data, and delivering the information selected in less than one second,
Before we start building our own server farms, Freebook will managed its infrastructure by leasing “wholesale” data center space from third-party landlords. Wholesale providers build the data center, including the raised-floor technical space and the power and cooling infrastructure, and then lease the completed facility. In the wholesale model, users can occupy their data center space in about five months, rather than the 12 months needed to build a major data center. This allows Freebook to scale rapidly to keep pace with growth of its audience.
Where Will the Freebook data centers be located?
Our Headquarters are in Phoenix Arizona with planned expansions in Fort Lauderdale Florida, Fort Worth, Texas, Menlo Park California Next to Facebook to remind the competition we are still here and another in New York City.
How big big will Freebook’s server farms be?
As Freebook grows, its data center requirements will growing along with it. The data center in Phoenix will be 307,000 square feet larger than two Wal-Mart Super centers.
In 2025 Freebook Will be going public and raising investment to grow the 13 Million dollars needed to build our first Micro Data-center. Before the Arizona DC can be built we need to start small and grow as we grow.
How many servers does Freebook have right now.
Freebook currently employs 16 servers in the home of CEO John Freeman who has them setup on a rack in his spare bedroom. This is an option thanks to the 1GIG Fiber optic internet by brightspeed.com
What kind of servers does Freebook use?
Freebook’s servers are powered by chips from both Intel and AMD, Ryzen Servers all recycled from working environments. Freebook owns a computer IT Recycling company where it purchases used IT Equipment from call centers and businesses. Then takes old desktops with i5 and i7 or AMD processors wipes the data from the users and installs data-center Linux which is a modified version of cloud Linux to use all cloud Linux software and no license requirement. “ CEO John Freeman says he took all the great things from cloud Linux and ported them to Alma Linux make it the free enterprise alternative.