Microsoft sends staff to Siberia

Microsoft sends staff to Siberia


Presumably the ones who bought iPhones

Microsoft is to build a 10,000-server data centre in the middle of Siberia, according to Russian news reports.

The software giant reportedly signed a deal on Friday to build the facility in the Irkutsk region of Russia.

The plans were announced by Birger Steen, chief executive at Microsoft Russia, and Andrei Gubov, an aide to Irkutsk's governor.

Russian paper Kommersant said that the data centre would require 50MW of power per year, and that Microsoft chose the region for its stable and low-cost power supplies.

The cost of the data centre is unknown, but Steen said that a similar centre in Ireland with 100,000 servers had cost around $500m.

No details were given as to who would staff the data centre, in a state where the temperature can drop below minus 50 degrees centigrade in winter.

Irkutsk has traditionally been a place of exile in Russia, used by the czars and communists for over 200 years. At one stage the exiled artists, officers and nobles accounted for a third of the entire Russian population.