For the past three years, the supply chain has been a rollercoaster for the architectural, engineering, and construction (AEC) industries — facing challenges, such as manufacturing disruptions, labor shortages, logistical issues, demand fluctuations, supply chain complexity, and regulatory hurdles.
The need for cooling capacity is increasing globally. An expanding population and an ever-growing dependence on data increases the need for process cooling, centralized space cooling, and data center cooling. Meanwhile, in many places, water scarcity is a massive issue.
Modern data centers are so much more than stacks of servers. Spanning nearly 1.000.000 square meters with cutting-edge technology and equipment, data centers contain everything needed to store, manage, and distribute an immense amount of data.
Data centers are the invisible strings that hold things together for enterprises in nearly every vertical — from health care, finance, and manufacturing to energy, transportation, and logistics.
A data center fabric built with a truly open NOS, flexible automation tools, and high-performance hardware that’s scalable can help enterprises gain a competitive edge in the digital era.
I read a lot about the strides the industry is making. But, then I come across reports, like the Data Health Check, and I can’t help but wonder … are we making strides?
Beyond their premiere 162,000-square-foot flagship data center in Staten Island, Telehouse America also offers colocation at their second New York City site in Manhattan as well as another site in Los Angeles, California.
Complex problems require intricate solutions, and tackling Scope 3 emissions undoubtedly presents a formidable challenge within the realm of carbon emissions reduction.