
Articles
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Dec 13, 2024 |
datacentrereview.com | Kayleigh Hutchins
The new PoP is scheduled to go live in the first quarter of 2025, and will provide high-capacity IP transit and ethernet solutions to service providers in the region. This will be Arelion’s second PoP in Rome, and its location at Aruba’s IT4 campus in Rome will enable it to meet customer demands for scalable space and power. Aruba’s Hyper Cloud Data Centre campus will host five independent data centres with a total of 30 MW of IT power, with redundancy at 2N or higher, once at full capacity.
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Dec 12, 2024 |
datacentrereview.com | Kayleigh Hutchins
Together with its energy efficiency product offerings, this capability allows customers to preconfigure integrated modular solutions based on a single Panduit SKU. Data centre enclosures can require up to 35 additional products to complete the deployment of each rack. Shipping preconfigured cabinets help reduce plastic and cardboard packing and saves on multiple vehicle deliveries and saves on deployment on-site.
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Dec 10, 2024 |
datacentrereview.com | Kayleigh Hutchins
This makes handling during installation and maintenance easy; during maintenance, device replacement can simply be carried out under load. The special feature is integrated in the DC connector. An innovative piece of electronics, directly built into the connector, actively quenches the electric arc.
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Dec 9, 2024 |
datacentrereview.com | Kayleigh Hutchins
Queen Mary University of London has implemented a refurbishment at its Tier II data centre to repurpose waste heat, as part of the university’s carbon reduction efforts. Since October, the heat generated by the data centre, which supports computing for CERN’s Large Hadron Collider, has been re-used to warm the Joseph Priestley Building and the district heating system at the university’s Mile End campus.
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Dec 5, 2024 |
datacentrereview.com | Kayleigh Hutchins
The facility, MIL1, will provide 27 MW of IT capacity within a single building over three floors. The data centre will use 100% renewable energy and be built to be ‘heat reuse ready’, initially recovering waste heat for use in ancillary spaces within the facility and providing the option to distribute to local third parties where demand exists. MIL1 will be delivered in three phases, with the first 9 MW operational by the third quarter of 2027.
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