UC San Diego to Deploy 2,000 Pixel Phones for Low-Carbon Cloud Computing
Updated
Updated · Google Research · Jun 12
UC San Diego to Deploy 2,000 Pixel Phones for Low-Carbon Cloud Computing
1 articles · Updated · Google Research · Jun 12
Summary
A 2,000-phone datacenter backed by Google is slated to launch at UC San Diego in fall 2026, giving researchers and students a low-cost cloud platform built from retired Pixel smartphones.
The project targets computing’s manufacturing emissions by reusing phone motherboards—the component responsible for about 50% of a handset’s embodied carbon—instead of buying new server hardware.
UC San Diego says 25 to 50 phones can match one modern server, making the full deployment roughly equivalent to 50 servers while using Kubernetes-managed clusters and Linux-converted devices.
Early tests showed a 20-phone cluster could handle peak grading demand for a 75-plus-student class with lower latency than the default AWS backend, and the 2,000-phone system could support about 100 such classes at once.
The effort will also serve as a large-scale testbed for smartphone reliability under sustained datacenter use, extending devices people typically replace every four years.