Enterprise data centers won’t really go away

The network specialist Aryaka recently sponsored a survey of 1,600 IT professionals. More than half (51%) said they planned to close all their traditional data centers in the next 24 months. Furthermore, 27% said they would eliminate at least some of their facilities, citing cloud computing migration as the primary driver.If you drove around the hamlet of Ashburn, Virginia, you would never guess those percentages were correct. I live and work nearby, and data center construction rages on in Ashburn. Four- and five-story windowless monsters flank many streets, making them look more like corridors than roads. [ Also on InfoWorld: How to choose a cloud data warehouse ] A typical data center can suck up more power than a small town. When you look at the systems they house, many run at low utilization levels. The typical enterprise that owns data center–housed systems purchases more hardware and software than they need in order to allow for fluctuations in market demand, environmental factors, time of year, and so forth. These are not practices that promote sustainability or drive down costs over time.To read this article in full, please click here

Nov 30, -0001 - 00:00
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Enterprise data centers won’t really go away
Techatty All-in-1 Publishing
Techatty All-in-1 Publishing

The network specialist Aryaka recently sponsored a survey of 1,600 IT professionals. More than half (51%) said they planned to close all their traditional data centers in the next 24 months. Furthermore, 27% said they would eliminate at least some of their facilities, citing cloud computing migration as the primary driver.

If you drove around the hamlet of Ashburn, Virginia, you would never guess those percentages were correct. I live and work nearby, and data center construction rages on in Ashburn. Four- and five-story windowless monsters flank many streets, making them look more like corridors than roads.

A typical data center can suck up more power than a small town. When you look at the systems they house, many run at low utilization levels. The typical enterprise that owns data center–housed systems purchases more hardware and software than they need in order to allow for fluctuations in market demand, environmental factors, time of year, and so forth. These are not practices that promote sustainability or drive down costs over time.

To read this article in full, please click here

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