The slow burn of data egress fees
Inside the cloud economics of the ‘renters not buyers’ club
Inside the cloud economics of the ‘renters not buyers’ club
Why it might make sense to store energy in the racks, instead of in the UPS
Academics with screwdrivers are making way for operations engineers and SLAs
What happens when you put a quantum computer alongside conventional systems?
End the year the right way: With a magazine all about data centers
In the wake of a ransomware disaster, and during the Covid pandemic, Travelex rebuilt its IT infrastructure for resiliency
Digital Realty's CEO and more on what generative AI means for the data center industry
DE-CIX's CEO on how data centers need to adapt
Behind generative AI and its impact on the industry
Hyperscalers are installing ground stations at data centers, while incumbents are moving to a more cloud-like, virtualized, as a Service way of thinking
Fredrick Brennan talks about the failure of free speech communities, the dangers of hate, and why he now welcomes censorship
Democrats ask whether we should break up big tech
They’re getting bigger, so defenses need to keep getting better
Amazon Web Services hopes to dominate the ground station market by following the cloud model that has served it so well before
AWS changed its Spot pricing to be smoother. The result ended up more expensive, and less transparent
When fiber and cellular coverage let you down, the answer could lie in a higher power
Amazon has announced a satellite broadband service. But by the time it is in the skies, there will be lots of other options
War, huh, good God y'all,
What is it good for?
Massive cloud contracts
It has been said that the cloud will make reliable data centers unnecessary. The truth is, the cloud is revealing deep issues with our legacy IT
How Google, Amazon and Microsoft create the illusion of infinite capacity
Virtualization can mean several different things, from bare metal to containers
The next step towards utility computing is a serverless model, where users buy functions, and the underlying hardware disappears from view
As Amazon grows in Asia, it has observations on how cloud is catching on in the region
Amazon is building cloud faster than any IT project ever. To keep it reliable and cheap, the company is making unprecedented network and hardware decisions down to the ASIC level
From GPUs to cloud computing, DCD looks at the impact of video games on the data center
It’s the biggest cloud provider by miles, but Paul Mah found AWS wouldn’t share much about its facilities
Even data sovereignty isn’t holding up Amazon, as it opens more and more data centers in Asia
Enterprises can go to the cloud one step at a time, but AWS’s Stephen Orban says they won’t want to come back