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by gruez 1019 days ago
>but there are frequently fairly large natural disasters in the US - there are always hurricanes and stuff, there was that flooding in new York not so long ago, earthquakes in California in the 90s, wildfires etc.

Right but what type of datacenter related incidents did they cause? Did us-east-1 go down because of hurricane sandy? Did us-west-1 go down because of wildfires? I don't seem to remember any datacenter outages caused by wide area natural disasters, whereas I can remember plenty caused by BGP/DNS/config shenanigans.

3 comments

> Did us-east-1 go Dow because of hurricane sandy?

Nope, but Sandy did a hell of a lot of damage to some key telecommunications infrastructure. Verizon lost multiple floors worth of equipment, cabling, and related infrastructure that served at least their customers across Manhattan.

Having geographical redundancy for mission critical workloads is a good investment if your business is making money. Networked computing is one of the few places we can actually “run away” from a physical source of problems. (Not forever, or universally, of course).

We’re based on the eastern seaboard. You bet we have failsafes in areas less susceptible to natural disaster.

> Did us-east-1 go down because of hurricane sandy?

No, but I was at a company with all the production services in Reston, VA during that storm, and we would have been pretty screwed if Sandy made landfall in the DC area instead of continuing north.

Sandy's flooding in NYC wasn't great for some of the datacenters there, I seem to recall some having trouble, but most were fine.

BGP and DNS are certainly much better at causing disruption, and especially global disruption though.

I remember Hurricane Katrina shutting down lots of online services, and directnic battling to stay online https://www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/2007/11/05/prov...