# Researchers Turned Used Pixel Phones Into a Data Center

> Source: <https://www.gadgetreview.com/researchers-turned-used-pixel-phones-into-a-data-center>
> Published: 2026-06-15 17:28:06+00:00

That drawer full of “obsolete” phones just became more valuable than you thought. [Google](https://www.gadgetreview.com/german-court-holds-google-liable-for-false-ai-overview-claims) Research and UC San Diego are proving that [retired Pixel phones](https://research.google/blog/a-low-carbon-computing-platform-from-your-retired-phones/) can match—and sometimes beat—server-grade hardware in head-to-head performance tests, turning [ 2,000 discarded devices](https://www.tomshardware.com/desktops/servers/researchers-recycle-old-phones-and-cluster-them-into-computing-platforms-says-processors-on-modern-smartphones-deliver-higher-single-core-performance-than-comparable-multicore-servers) into a data center that delivers the computing power of

**50** traditional servers.

## The Performance Reality Check

The numbers flip conventional wisdom on its head. A **2023 Pixel Fold’s** performance cores score higher than [ AMD EPYC](https://www.amd.com/en/products/processors/server/epyc.html) server cores in SPEC CPU 2017 benchmarks when compared per-thread. Google’s testing shows that clustering

**25 to 50** phone motherboards delivers the same CPU throughput as a modern dual-socket server.

[In classroom trials](https://www.techspot.com/news/112762-researchers-turning-old-pixel-phones-data-center-they.html), a 20-phone micro-cluster processed assignments from **75 students** in parallel programming courses—finishing the job in **50 seconds**, faster than comparable AWS instances.

## From Android to Data Center

The transformation is surgical: remove screen, battery, cameras, and speakers, leaving just the motherboard with its system-on-chip, RAM, and storage. These boards get mounted in server racks, powered by centralized supplies, and networked like traditional nodes.

Android gets replaced with standard [ Linux distributions](https://hothardware.com/news/google-turns-thousands-of-pixel-phones-into-a-low-carbon-data-center), then managed through

**Kubernetes**—making a cluster of phones look identical to any other cloud infrastructure to users and applications.

## The Carbon Angle That Actually Matters

Here’s where the sustainability math gets interesting: roughly **50%** of a smartphone’s manufacturing emissions come from the motherboard and processor assembly. With typical upgrade cycles of **three to four years**, functional computing power gets discarded while companies build new servers for the same workloads.

The UCSD cluster, launching [ Fall 2026](https://www.kucoin.com/news/flash/google-and-ucsd-to-build-low-carbon-cloud-using-2000-retired-pixel-phones), aims to keep hardware productive longer rather than manufacturing fresh silicon for student coursework and research projects.

## Reality Check on the Limits

This isn’t replacing Google’s own data centers anytime soon. Managing thousands of heterogeneous phone boards introduces operational complexity that runs counter to typical data center standardization. Questions remain about long-term reliability under continuous server duty—phones weren’t designed for **24/7** rack life.

The sweet spot appears to be [budget](https://www.gadgetreview.com/the-trump-phone-a-budget-phone-priced-like-flagship-gold)-constrained institutions running parallelizable workloads like course autograding and batch analytics, where getting compute capacity at “a fraction of the usual cost” matters more than maximum reliability guarantees.

The 2,000-phone cluster represents something bigger than clever recycling. It challenges how we think about meeting growing compute demand—not just by [building more data centers](https://www.gadgetreview.com/openai-and-partners-launch-500-billion-stargate-project), but by aggregating the billions of capable devices already in circulation.
