![]() But even so, there’s a good chance whatever system you’re building can and will produce useful data of its own, and there’s an equally good chance you’ll want to learn something from it. Of course, the volume of data you care about is probably a lot more modest. That’s a lot of data - and there’s more every day. If you could pull all that data into an HD movie, and you sat down to start watching that movie 2.5 million years ago (with your favorite saber-toothed friend, say), you’d still be watching the same movie today. If you could store all that data on 3.5" floppies, you’d need more than a hundred quadrillion floppies to capture it all - enough to cover the planet entirely (with much room for overlap) or to pave a nice bridge for yourself from your front porch well into interstellar space. If you could convert all the world’s data into droplets of water, for instance, at one megabyte per drop, you’d have enough 1MB drops to fill two more Lake Washingtons. ![]() However you choose to measure it (and there are various ways), it’s a quantity so massive - hundreds of zettabytes, by some estimates - that it’s kind of a hard thing to quite get your head around. It’s fun to think about how much data there is swirling around in the global datasphere these days. Secure your Kubernetes toolchain with Pulumi ESC and OIDC.Pulumi and Redis Cloud: Real-Time Data for Modern Apps.Pulumi Cloud Adds Multi-factor Authentication. ![]()
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