Intelligent Tech Channels Issue 01 | Page 50

INTELLIGENT DATA CENTRES connection or utility substation nearby that ensures that uninterrupted power is available for the data centre? What is its distance to the nearest highway, urban city, airport, nuclear plant, important infrastructure, that needs to be balanced in terms of remoteness, accessibility and proximity as required? 3 Design An important attribute inside a data centre is not just how much existing equipment is stacked and how it is stacked, but also how new equipment will be stacked and configured. What are the options available to bring in new equipment in terms of individual cabinets, cages with racks, data modules and private rooms? And once decided how the equipment will be stacked and configured, what is the availability of power and cooling per square area of space leased. Does the data centre follow raised floors and cooling below with equipment racks directly secured to the concrete floor slabs? This is usually an important consideration for heavy and sensitive equipment. Other parameters to validate during selection are cooling efficiency, power density per rack, modular approach to build up, and just in time space expansion. Lastly, what is the availability of temporary office space when employees from end-customer organisations are expected to function on-site. 4 Connectivity The best advantages for an endcustomer are when the data centre offers the choice of network connectivity from multiple service providers and from multiple landing points. This allows the end-customer to become less susceptible to latency issues that may arise from time to time with specific providers and through specific routes. The ideal situation arises when the data centre provides direct connectivity to service providers they are contracted with. As well as the option of bringing in other service providers on demand without any specific preferences or bias towards any of them. This is sometimes referred to as carrier neutrality. 50 5 Operations Auditing the physical attributes of a data centre is usually one side of the selection process. The other side is the human audit. How well does a data centre go to reduce human errors? Are the processes and procedures of operation documented? How well are the staff trained on these processes and procedures? Are the processes flexible enough and is change management built into the data centre operations? How does the data centre manage service level agreements, maintenance schedules, and planned downtime? Datacenters compliant with Tier III and Tier IV levels have redundant and fault tolerant capacities inbuilt and hence should rarely have any downtime. But data centres compliant with Tier I and Tier II levels will need to go through planned downtime and will need to actively manage their service level agreements accordingly. A data centre is also a business and the stability of the business model, shareholders, and profitability is an important part of the consideration. equipment is an important operational procedure. This covers end of life replacement, selection of new equipment, and incorporation of redundant equipment. Critical equipment is usually UPS devices, generators, switchgear, chillers, utility connections, control monitoring systems. Another key aspect is the presence of Data Center Infrastructure Management that can alert when there is a reduction in planned availability and reliability in real time. Finally, most data centres tend to offer their own share of hosted IT solutions and going forward this may increasingly become the final point of differentiation. 6 Other factors Physical security is an integral part of the operations with varying degrees of importance for every data centre. This usually includes surveillance, biometrics and two factor authentication. Similarly, commissioning and maintenance of critical Sachin Bhardwaj is Director, Marketing and Business Development, eHosting DataFort Issue 01 INTELLIGENT TECH CHANNELS