Resource: The New Data Center

Network World has a package of stories titled The New Data Center that addresses energy efficiency in the data center.

Rich Miller

February 21, 2008

1 Min Read
DataCenterKnowledge logo in a gray background | DataCenterKnowledge

Network World has a package of stories titled The New Data Center that addresses energy efficiency in mission-critical facilities. There are at least eight stories, including a look at power metrics at Digital Realty Trust (DLR), which uses dollars-per-kilowatt as its key measure of the capital cost of building a data center. An excerpt:

Digital Realty developed the dollars-per-kilowatt metric in 2006 but has been using it as the key benchmark for its business since mid-2007, says Smith (Jim Smith, Digital Realty's VP of engineering). It's straightforward to calculate dollars-per-kilowatt: Divide the cost of the data center under construction by its kilowatts of UPS capacity, and you come up with the project's dollars-per-kilowatt measurement. For example, a $9 million data center that provides 1000 kilowatts of UPS capacity costs $9000 per kilowatt. Using this metric, Digital Realty has found it gets better returns on low-density data centers than on high-density ones.

Network World also looks at Green Grid metrics for power consumption (PUE and DCIE) and five big-picture strategies for reducing your data center power usage.

Subscribe to the Data Center Knowledge Newsletter
Get analysis and expert insight on the latest in data center business and technology delivered to your inbox daily.

You May Also Like