Thursday, 9 October 2008

New HP data centre for Cyberjaya announced

Hewlett-Packard is to develop a 60-acre campus at Cyberjaya in Malaysia. Scheduled to be completed in 2010, the campus will host multiple core functions in one location. The functions hosted would include an internal global application development centre for HP’s global IT organisation, a data centre for outsourcing services, a professional centre and a call centre.

Wednesday, 1 October 2008

Fujitsu Australia opens new data centre

Fujitsu Australia Limited has opened its new sustainable data centre at Sydney’s Homebush Bay after work to improve the facility’s energy efficiency and reduce its environmental footprint. The three storey, purpose-built structure has undergone significant enhancements over the past eight months to meet Fujitsu’s stringent environmental design principles and deliver measurable savings on both greenhouse gas emissions and financial metrics The facility includes high density, hybrid cooling technology which uses recycled chilled water and spatial layout planning to minimise thermal currents. The company said that the use of a closed loop cooling system significantly reduces the amount of water needed to maintain the facility at an industry standard 23o Celsius and 50 per cent humidity. As a result, 80 per cent less water than a conventional cooling system will be used and the data centre will consume up to 32 per cent less energy. The facility will be managed from a central location, and auto-sensor lighting systems that only switch on when needed, reduces usage by up to 60 per cent.

Tuesday, 30 September 2008

JPIX extends peering fabric to Equinix

Japan Internet Exchange Co. Ltd. (JPIX), the largest Internet exchange in Japan, has extended its peering fabric to the Equinix Tokyo-2 (TY2) Internet Business Exchange (IBX(R)) data centre located in Shinagawa. As a part of the agreement, Equinix customers will be able to directly exchange traffic, or "peer," with JPIX's Internet service providers, cable TV service providers and content providers, with the objective of reducing the costs of network traffic exchange. Under this agreement, JPIX will set up an Internet Exchange (IX) switch at the Equinix TY2 centre, and it will use Equinix's IBXLink service to directly connect to the Equinix TY1 centre located in Heiwajima.

Wednesday, 24 September 2008

New Data Centre to launch in India

State owned Indian Telephone Industry is launching a new data centre which will become operational within the next six months. Located a the ITI Bangalore premises, the new facility is being constucted by a consortium of companies from Hyderabad. ITI Bangalore is providing the infrastructure, including land and building space for the centres, partner companies are to provide the required technology and equipment support to the centre. The centre will be 40,000 sq ft, but is planned to expand substantially over the next 2-3 years. ITI has been approached by a number of institutions including RailTel and some banking organisations to utilise the data centre.

Tuesday, 16 September 2008

New Data Centre in Queensland to open in 3 months

Queensland's new A$220 million high-tech data centre will host it's first tenants within three months.
The tier 3 data centre, code named
Polaris 1, is a joint venture between insurer Suncorp and the Springfield Land Corporation. The 14,000m², three-story building will colocate enterprises including Suncorp, NEC and Fujitsu with Queensland government departments and councils, including its service provider CITEC. Polaris 1 uses non-potable water for cooling, saving a potential 650,000 litres a day,trigeneration power feeds, and rotary UPS avoiding the use of lead-acid batteries. Two further Polaris data centres (one in north Brisbane) are planned targetting South East Asia as an overseas disaster recovery centre, once Pipe's Guam fibre link is completed.The data centre will be connected to the Springfield to Brisbane dark fibre networ owned by the Springfield Land Corporation and managed by Pipe Networks. Security is enhanced by Biometric devices installed throughout the complex, including deep-palm and fingerprint readers, while large vehicle and man traps measure the weight of people and machinery and can isolate unauthorised access attempts to the complex. NEC's Smartcatch video monitors use behavioral analysis and facial recognition to identify malicious activity. Power for Polaris 1 can be upgraded from 800 to 1500 watts per square metre, and support 60 kilowatt racks.

Wednesday, 10 September 2008

Tata enters content delivery space with BitGravity

Tata Communications, and broadcaster BitGravity have launched a worldwide Content Delivery Network (CDN) service. Tata has more than 300 points of presence worldwide throughout Europe, Asia, North America and India. Tata has also invested USD 11.5 million in convertible debt in BitGravity who in turn has named Tata Communications’ Chief Technology Officer, John Hayduk to its Board of Directors. Customers can access content, including High-Definition Video, without delay or jitter. Fast forwarding, cache clearing, resolution switching and rate throttling are just a few of the features. With the rise of Video as the main application, combined with data centre storage facilities, a CDN was the missing piece of the puzzle. Watch for other players to finalise their global plans.

Tuesday, 9 September 2008

Haryana State to build new Data Centre

Haryana State, in northwestern India, will build a new Data Centre as part of its plans to implement the National e-governance Plan. The project is awaiting a go ahead from the central government with a proposal prepared by consultants PWC, to the Government of India and the approval is expected to come by the end of this month. The state data centre will be developed and maintained by a private company in collaboration with Haryana State Electronics Development Corporation (Hartron). It will act as the main data centre where all the state government departments for data storage. The facility will have a 35 rack storage capacity which will be sufficient to store data for the next 10 years and the capacity may be scaled up in future.