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Corndork2 wrote: » Most providers have a few core support areas geographically dispersed in different time zones. Perhaps Verizon is strengthening their CST zone support? Verizon also has a lot of points of presence interconnected all across the country. As network managers and support we can manage any of these sites as long as we are connected to them. We only need on site support if hands need to be used to make physical connections. As we all know in the Networking Industry, we can work from anywhere as long as we are connected. Currently, real estate in Detroit is cheap, and tax incentives in Detroit are high. From a business perspective, if Verizon needed to increase staffing, using Detroit makes great sense. They can score cheap office space, and take tax rebates.
--chris-- wrote: » There are even cheaper areas (Flint, Saginaw and 15 minutes outside of Ann Arbor for instance) than Detroit, with much less BS. But that's a separate topic This has me thinking though, wouldn't the "big three" have there own DC's? Or would they "shop" that out? I know Chrysler has an immense IT labor force here, and GM/Ford are not far behind but I am always looking for other ideas.
Corndork2 wrote: » They do! They have their own DC's for high compute. Fluid dynamics, aerodynamics, modeling, etc are usually done on those clusters. They also have equally sizeable storage farms. For example, GM just spun up the biggest datacenter in the automotive industry and one of the greenest. However, bandwidth has to come from somewhere, so I am sure they have colocated services. It depends on the cost, business use case, and technology need. Id expect a mix of both.
--chris-- wrote: » Flint
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