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TechPointCloud

Google adds new east-coast cloud data center

Barb Darrow
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Barb Darrow
Barb Darrow
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Barb Darrow
By
Barb Darrow
Barb Darrow
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October 1, 2015, 12:29 PM ET
Google Updates Its Logo
MOUNTAIN VIEW, CA - SEPTEMBER 02: The new Google logo is displayed on a sign outside of the Google headquarters on September 2, 2015 in Mountain View, California. Google has made the most dramatic change to their logo since 1999 and have replaced their signature serif font with a new typeface called Product Sans. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)Photograph by Justin Sullivan — Getty Images

The land grab among hyperscale public cloud vendors continued Thursday with Google’s announcement that it’s opening a new east-coast data center in South Carolina.

From the blog post:

We’re opening our new us-east1 region in South Carolina for Google Compute Engine, Google Cloud Storage, and Google Cloud SQL. Google App Engine will be coming soon, we’ll have more on this shortly! This will open up our services to customers that were waiting on a U.S. East Coast presence. Besides lowering latency to those on the U.S. East Coast, the addition of the South Carolina location gives customers across North America the capability to build multi-region disaster recovery plans for their applications running on Google Cloud Platform.

This comes two days after Microsoft (MSFT) announced the opening of three new Microsoft Azure data centers in India. And a few days before Amazon (AMZN) Web Services annual AWS Re:Invent conference.

It’s important for public cloud providers to offer lots of regional coverage to cut down on latency (slow operations). The closer a provider can put compute power to the end user the faster things work. That’s why the race is on to put more data centers in more places.

Google (GOOG) claims 14 data center sites (actually data center farm sites may be a more accurate term) worldwide.

AWS, Microsoft, and Google are widely seen as the top three public cloud superpowers, each spending multiple-billions of dollars yearly on cloud infrastructure.

For more on Google’s other businesses, check out the video.

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Barb Darrow
By Barb Darrow
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