Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Oracle Technology

Oracle Eyes Optical Links As Final Frontier of Data-Center Scaling 14

An anonymous reader writes "Oracle is exploring silicon photonics, an optical technology drawing widespread interest, as a potential weapon in the battle against data-center power consumption. Advances in CPU and memory design could boost efficiency dramatically over the next few years. When they do, the interconnects among components, servers and switches will effectively become the power hogs of the data center, according to Ashok Krishnamoorthy, architect and chief technologist in photonics at Oracle. Oracle isn't often associated with networking and may not even manufacture or sell the technologies it's now studying. But as a big player in computing and storage, it could benefit from fostering a future technology that helps make faster, more efficient data centers possible."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Oracle Eyes Optical Links As Final Frontier of Data-Center Scaling

Comments Filter:
  • OK.... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by fuzzyfuzzyfungus ( 1223518 ) on Monday October 28, 2013 @12:21PM (#45259511) Journal
    Is there a single hardware related company that doesn't have a speculative-office-of-silicon-photonics group hanging around somewhere? Why highlight Oracle?
    • by Anonymous Coward
      Blatant Slashvertisement. I'm guessing that Dice got paid to run this story.
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Because the average Slashdotter hasn't used products from most of the telecom vendor companies that are looking at Silicon Photonics. Silicon Photonics still doesn't have an answer to the fundamental problem that you can't create a laser on Silicon. So, there still has to be a VCSEL or something attached to the chip and that wipes out any advantage you had in using CMOS. I have a feeling more companies are going to start doing photonic integration on Indium Phosphide like Infinera, then Indium Phosphide fab

  • If they find it feasible, they will sell it. The tech will probably be called "Oracle on Oracle... on Oracle". Like... an orgy of oracles.

    • The tech will probably be called "Oracle on Oracle... on Oracle". Like... an orgy of oracles.

      Yo Dawg, I hear you like Oracles ...

  • by Sarten-X ( 1102295 ) on Monday October 28, 2013 @12:25PM (#45259569) Homepage

    "Faster, more efficient data centers" are already possible. Just remove all of the Oracle products.

  • Especially the "But as a big player in computing and storage..." bit was cute. Big player with around 5% market share in servers and half that in storage... yep, that's big...

    Peter.

  • I'm a doctor, not a USB cable. - EMH [wikipedia.org].

  • Wasn't Sun (the corporate predecessor of Oracle's HW division, for those with short memories) talking about this stuff like a decade ago?

    Wake me up when there's an actual product announcement.

    • That's not fair - optical has definitely been trickling down from high-end long-haul applications, progressively towards campus/enterprise/residential networks and is continuing inside the data center:

      Following a September 11, 2013 press announcement of them being officially Thunderbolt certified by Intel, in late September 2013, US glass company Corning Inc. released the first range of optical Thunderbolt cables available in the Western marketplace outside of Japan, along with optical USB 3.0 cables, both

  • Really?

    That sounds a lot like, "Everything that can be invented, has already been invented...except our one last BIG invention."

The use of money is all the advantage there is to having money. -- B. Franklin

Working...