Data Center Design Trends: Cold Locations
Due to location specific benefits, data center operators and related businesses have begun building more facilities in colder parts of the world.
Due to location specific benefits, data center operators and related businesses have begun building more facilities in colder parts of the world.
Iron Mountain announced that the company broke ground on a Boston data center, slated to open in early 2014.
Sentinel announced the completion of the first 50,000 sq. ft. phase of its North Carolina data center colocation facility.
Telx announced that it will deploy high-density fiber infrastructure at its N.Y. Metro campus and that it expanded its footprint in Chicago.
A ruling in the Energy Department’s ESPC contract with Lockheed Martin could have a substantial impact on future data center finance.
Home to more than 40 data centers, Ashburn continues its reign as an industry touchstone.
Colocation provider Xand raised its debt financing by a significant margin in order to pursue future acquisitions and data center expansion.
C7’s new Granite Point II facility offers a Utah-based colocation data center that the company said can compete with other top providers in the region.
Data center downtime continues to be a costly problem for enterprises, especially those that rely more than ever on colocation facilities for mission-critical business needs.
Biomass is a viable alternative for renewable and survivable data center design.