Given that hard-disk capacity probably increases by 50%+ per year, this is not 
at all surprising.  That huge Utah NSA data center was probably designed in 
2000-2001.  At that time, the typical hard drive as sold was probably 2-4 
gigabytes.  At that time, it would probably have only been able to store the 
metadata of all phone calls in the world.  By the time Clapper's lie unearthed 
the facts, in 2013, the typical hard drive had increased to perhaps 1000x 
larger, or 2 terabytes.  That would have allowed that data center to store the 
audio of every phone call in the world for a year, maybe much more.And 
10-terabyte hard drives are now being made.            Jim Bell

http://fedscoop.com/white-house-gets-tougher-on-data-centers-in-new-policy

White House gets tougher on data centers in new policy
The Data Center Optimization Initiative will supersede 2010 Federal Data Center 
Consolidation Initiative, a foundational effort that led to the closure of 
1,900 data centers since 2010.
By Billy Mitchell
AUGUST 1, 2016 5:30 PM
BIO
The White House finalized a policy Monday that forbids agencies from budgeting 
funds toward the creation or expansion of data centers, with few exceptions.  
The Office of Management and Budget implemented the Data Center Optimization 
Initiative, introduced as a draft plan in March, to supersede the 2010 Federal 
Data Center Consolidation Initiative, building on the previous policy's 
framework for making IT spending more efficient. 
The DCOI requires that agencies wishing to put resources toward the expansion 
or building of a data center must request approval from federal CIO Tony Scott 
and include an analysis of alternative options and how doing so would result in 
a net reduction of the agency's data center inventory. 
As set forth in the prior FDCCI policy, agencies must continue to reduce data 
center inventory to "essential enterprise levels." The new policy defines data 
centers as “rooms with at least one server, providing services (whether in a 
production test, staging, development, or any other environment) but not “rooms 
containing only print servers, routing equipment, switches, security devices 
(such as firewalls), or other telecommunications components.”
Based on this definition, agencies must complete a review of their data center 
inventory by Aug. 31. 
Scott in a blog post touted the "enormous progress" the federal government has 
made reducing its data center footprint since 2010.
"Agencies have closed over 1,900 data centers, reducing the real estate 
footprint of Federal data centers by more than 1.2 million square feet, and 
made significant strides toward optimizing existing data centers," he wrote. 
"These efforts have resulted in nearly $1 billion in savings and a Federal data 
center inventory that is more efficient, effective, and secure. "
The new policy cites the Federal IT Acquisition Reform Act as a driving force, 
holding CIOs accountable for "implementing and measuring progress toward 
meeting the goals set forth in this memorandum." 
Particularly, the DCOI holds CIOs to meet stringent goals around consolidation 
and optimization. In the next three years, agencies must close at least 25 
percent of their tiered data centers — centers with separate physical space, 
uninterruptible power supply, dedicated cooling systems and a backup generator 
— and 60 percent of non-tiered data centers, which are smaller systems, like 
server rooms and nodes. 
"This target will result in the closure of approximately 52% of the overall 
Federal data center inventory and a reduction of approximately 31% in the real 
estate footprint occupied by data centers Government-wide," Scott wrote.
Likewise, the policy calls for agencies to reduce annual data center costs by 
at least 25 percent by fiscal year 2018, estimating a savings of $2.7 billion 
if achieved. 
Agencies must also achieve optimization targets in five other areas, according 
to Scott: "installation of energy metering to track power consumption; a power 
usage effectiveness (PUE) target to improve energy efficiency; virtualization 
and server utilization metrics to ensure IT equipment is being utilized 
efficiently; and a facility utilization metric to drive more efficient use of 
space in Federal data centers.
To get there, OMB has called on the General Services Administration to provide 
a marketplace of shared services so that agencies of any size, with any budget 
can strive for these goals.
GSA will provide a Data Center Infrastructure Management Tool Assessment to 
help agencies access tools "to monitor, measure, manage and/or control data 
center utilization and energy consumption of all IT-related equipment," and 
share other best practices to help agencies comply with the policy.
"The marketplace will ensure an even playing field for customers to learn about 
and negotiate services with providers," GSA Administrator Denise Turner Roth 
said in a statement.

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