PRESENTATION TRANSCRIPT:
Today, IT resources can be provisioned quickly and cheaply—some would say too quickly and cheaply. But those IT resources rely on brick and mortar as well as megawatts, which are abstracted from the IT department. This Webcast will identify pitfalls data center teams should avoid.
BOOK:
Some of the most useful benchmarks and metrics in evaluating server performance are provided in this article along with descriptions to help IT managers identify the ones that best fit their organization.
WHITE PAPER:
Explore this concise white paper to uncover who industry leader IBM chose as their partner to undertake this challenge and how they met each goal on schedule along the way. Read on to learn which organization could keep pace with IBM to deliver the power, cooling, and single window monitoring solutions they needed.
WHITE PAPER:
This Gabriel Consulting report research report focuses on the survey results and discusses IBM’s Power Systems virtualization milestones and touches on the implications for the Unix server market.
WHITE PAPER:
Data Center carbon emissions are a growing global concern. The US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) cites data centers as a major source of energy consumption in the United States. This paper introduces a simple approach, supported by free web-based tools, for estimating the carbon footprint of a data center anywhere in the world.
PRODUCT LITERATURE:
IBM can help you evaluate the costs and long-term benefits of your current energy strategy. Start with a basic one-day energy assessment or get a full profile of your data center with IBM Thermal Analysis for High Density Computing.
EBOOK:
This visual Photostory, from our experts at SearchDataCenter.com, examines how data centers have evolved to become nearly unrecognizable compared to their early 90's counterparts. Read on to take a look at the future of data centers and how IT careers are expected to develop alongside the technology.
WHITE PAPER:
Network closets in the healthcare setting are housing more powerful and critical equipment as hospitals and ambulatory offices rely on these spaces to support an increasing number of business-critical applications such as electronic medical records (EMRs), wireless communications and digital imaging.