Poor planning blamed for lack of data centre space
By Rene Millman,
Over a third of enterprise data centres run out of space because of poor capacity planning, according to a new survey.
According to the study of 100 enterprise data centres throughout the world and across different industry sectors, 37 per cent of those surveyed admitted they had run out of space, power or cooling capacity without sufficient notice in the last two years.
Only 6 per cent considered they were 'excellent' at predicting when additional space or power infrastructure will be needed, with 10 per cent describing their abilities as 'poor' and 27 per cent as merely 'fair'.
The study found that managing data centre capacity is a significant challenge, with many companies unable to predict their capacity needs accurately. 41 per cent of those surveyed said their capacity planning procedures were poor (11 per cent) or fair (30 per cent). Only 20 per cent considered their procedures to be great (14 per cent) or excellent (5 per cent).
The top five challenges, chosen by respondents as high priorities in managing the data centre's capacity were; limitations on cooling capacity, limitations of the power distribution system, achieving sufficient airflow through racks, assessing future infrastructure needs and the amount of total power delivered from the utility.
William Clifford, CEO of the Aperture Research Institute, which carried out the study, said management of the applications layer of the data centre is already mature, "but our research shows that many data centres still struggle to manage the physical constraints of the environment."
"It's shocking that so many data centres have run out of space and consider their ability to plan future capacity needs to be inadequate," he said. "The only thing you know for certain is that businesses and demands on the data centre change, and successful data centres are those that can handle that change."
He said that he expected capacity to be a problem ten years ago, but the introduction of power hungry technologies like blade servers "is changing that."
"The next generation of data centres will have to accommodate far greater cooling and power distribution requirements than many of today's legacy data centres were designed to handle," said Clifford.
Sponsored results
Rapid rise in global warming is forecast - Times Online
in the US) is a case of perpetually gazing throughthe beliefs or comforts of middle-Americans....
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol...
BBC NEWS | dot.life | A blog about technology from BBC News | Xbox Live goes limp
the receiving end of Microsoft's shabbyconsole was sent for repair to Microsoftstrongest grasp of...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/techn...
An experiment that hints we are wrong on climate change - Times Online
going to put the names of every person on earthand unfortunately 40% of you are going to havejust...
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol...
advertisement
Latest Server Features
The present and future of IT security
Mobile working and virtualisation could boost security - this and other insights on the past, present and future of IT security from Gartner research vice president Jay Heiser.
- What's happened to VMware?
- Free Linux driver development
- Tera Scale Lab: Where hardware meets software
- Big IT for CERN's particle smashing experiment
- Strip mining of open source
- IT around the world: Russia
- Where will IT be in 2015?
- Linux - a disruptive technology?
- Xandros buys Linspire – What does it mean for Linux?
Latest Server Reviews
EXCLUSIVE: Hewlett Packard ProLiant DL785 G5
Rating: ![]()
advertisement
Latest News Videos in Server
Video: Steve Murphy, Hitachi Data Systems
IT PRO speaks to Steve Murphy, UK Managing Director of storage technology specialist Hitachi Data Systems.
White papers
Want more background on today's hottest IT trends?
Visit IT PRO's white paper library for more on virtualisation, encryption and other topics.
Register for IT PRO
You'll get exclusive member benefits including free white papers, downloads, Webinars and weekly newsletters full of the latest IT PRO news, reviews, insight and expertise.
Sponsored results
- Rapid rise in global warming is forecast - Times Online
in the US) is a case of perpetually gazing throughthe beliefs or comforts of middle-Americans. Individualy, so many of them are congenitally...
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/scienc...
- BBC NEWS | dot.life | A blog about technology from BBC News | Xbox Live goes limp
the receiving end of Microsoft's shabbyconsole was sent for repair to Microsoftstrongest grasp of English being a foreign call centre! This only...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/technology/2008/01/x...
- An experiment that hints we are wrong on climate change - Times Online
going to put the names of every person on earthand unfortunately 40% of you are going to havejust the latest way of convincing you to givethe tiny...
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/articl...



Social Bookmark this article: What is this?