Industries most vulnerable to data center outages, like banking and finance, government, health care, manufacturing, media and communications, retail, and transportation/utilities, have average downtime costs of over $5 million per hour.
According to The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), the Cybersecurity Framework says businesses faced with disaster should identify, protect, detect, respond and recover.
Today’s data centers need to cut costs and reduce energy use while keeping their sensitive equipment cool, and choosing liquid cooling is an effective way to achieve these efficiencies.
In December 2020, CN Texas released statewide broadband coverage maps that showed more than 315,000 households in Texas did not have broadband service — less than half of homes in roughly 28 rural counties.
Managers can’t be on the ground at each and every site, but modern solutions, like digital twins, can help address the challenges of remote management.
Modular construction offers clients familiarity and repeatability for equipment while also providing opportunities to troubleshoot without risking the schedule and adding cost.
Companies continue to evaluate the best way to tackle data challenges, and many have implemented a new C-Suite role — chief data officer (CDO) — to work with the CEO and ensure data is top of mind for every decision.
Sunny weather, financial incentives, and a unique city culture give Austin the appeal it needs to become the next tech hub over the course of the next two decades.