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  biz01101010
@rr.com | reply to JoelC707 Re: collocation question
are collo facilities similar to POPs or COs?
finally, how is a 'data center' differ from a collo? | |  JoelC707
join:2002-07-09 Tucson, AZ clubs:
| In some respects they are all the same. Collocation simply means to co-locate your equipment at another location. CLEC's (FDN, XO, Megapath) collocate equipment all the time in a CO or POP from the ILEC (Bellsouth, Verizon, Quest). They are just collocating different gear but the end result is the same.
For that matter at one time MediaOne in Atlanta (long before they were gobbled up by AT&T then Comcast) allowed anyone to collocate equipment at certain hub sites. I don't know the details of how, what, where and why but I know it was done. Theoretically the same could be done at Bellsouth or similar if you know the right person or are willing to pay the right amount which may have been the case with MediaOne.
For Data Center vs collo, they are mostly one and the same. Let's put it this way, a collo facility is a data center but the reverse may or may not be true. The only difference between the two would come in play on the rules of the data center. Some data centers (take NAC, the site where DSLR is hosted) may not allow equipment to be collocated (I don't know if they do or not, it's just an example) but they will let you buy all the pre-existing dedicated servers you want and basically achieve the same thing. But assuming NAC does allow you to collo equipment does not mean they aren't a data center.
Basically a data center is any hardened (we hope) facility that houses various types of equipment for the purpose of allowing remote users access to it for any number of reasons or methods. A CO or POP could even be called data centers, in fact they are likely much more hardened than a typical data center. But just like a CO or POP can serve specialized needs a collo can as well. Basically what I mean by that is that a CO usually wouldn't host your server but will host your DSLAM if you were a CLEC, a collo on the same token will host your server but may not have any pre-existing dedicated servers to sell you.
I hope this didn't muddy the waters too much, I was just trying to cover all the angles. | |  youngmoore
join:2001-03-16 Marietta, GA
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| Wow Joel, you really put some thought into that one, nice job.
Biz I will give you one example of why people need "colo" We do online databackup. We literately handle about 1TB of data a day. That data is then "replicated" to our West Coast Colo'ed servers. There is simply no way to shift that much traffic under any other transport other than Gigy Ethernet. Ontop of that We have Coagent and L3 as providers. We use coagent on the out "sending" as much as we can since there 1/10 the cost per MB. If they go down or have routing issues we automatically switch to our Level 3 connection. Its literately 2 hops from our Eastcoast to west since it travels only on the internal route of either provider. Our traffic never hits the open internet since both providers are in the same colo's. Thats an example of our own gear in a COLO.
Another example would be like rackspace.com which has prebuilt servers for pretty much anything you want to do but its on their servers instead of yours and you lease those from them, plus bandwidth etc.
We use our own gear but that gives you "maybe" a better idea of what the terms are and uses are for COLO's/Datacenters.
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