This is the "Open Rack," one of the first OCP hardware projects ...
Compare the Open Rack to the typical closed rack like these from IBM
The racks look like the sci-fi data center in from the James Bond "Skyfall" movie
This is the "Winterfell" web server. This box holds three computer servers that dish out Web pages and they slide into the open rack.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThis is Dragonstone, a database server that uses only flash memory, the same type of memory used in a smartphone or thumb drive. It slides into an open rack.
Compare that to this brand new high-end Oracle database server.
This is the new Group Hug Board, the most disruptive idea, yet. It turns a motherboard into a Lego-like assembly project where you can pick all the pieces, even the main processor, and snap them together.
Here's what an Intel motherboard usually looks like, with most of the components wired on.
This is an OCP project called the "AMD Roadrunner." It's a motherboard that will fit in a regular rack. It's a way to use the OCP servers with racks an enterprise already owns.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThis is the "open vault storage rack." This box can be loaded with small-but-dense storage drives. Stacks of them can be put into the Open Rack.
There is an Open Vault for "cold" storage. Those are files that aren't accessed very often but need to be kept anyway. Cold storage needs to be high capacity and cheap.
Facebook's OCP team also announced plans to build a new network switch that could compete with Cisco. There is no prototype or picture of it yet. Facebook's Najam Ahmad is leading the project.
Put it all together on an Open Rack and it looks like this ...
Again, compare that to a high-end server and rack from IBM, pictured here.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThe Facebook team is always thinking up new ideas, too, via hackathons. This is a server board submerged in oil to keep it cool.
Hardware hackathoners also baked microchips in a toaster oven for some far-out engineering reason.
OCP is spreading internationally, too. It's in Taiwan, where most of the world's hardware is built, and in Japan.
OCP lead to the Open Incubate accelerator program to fund open source hardware startups. It's backed by Austin Ventures, Battery Ventures, and The Valley Fund.
Here's a look at the software side of enterprise tech