Intelligent Data Centres Issue 10 | Page 40

EXPERT OPINION Why encouraging youth is fundamental to our technological future Technology is constantly evolving and many of the future jobs that children today will be employed in do not even currently exist. Steve Bowes-Phipps, Senior Data Centre Consultant, PTS Consulting and Chair DCA Workforce Development and Capability SIG, tells us why it’s so important that young people see the data centre industry as a career option to ensure our technological future is successful. 40 Issue 10 rawling through the various networking events that the data centre industry hosts on a regular basis and wandering around the various conferences that dominate the autumn season in the UK and Europe, one can’t help but notice the average profile of a DC Professional is mid-40s to mid-60s and male. T As recently as the 1990s, organisations started to move away from the locked-in, single-vendor environment of the likes of IBM, ICL, Bull and others and develop their own IT strategies that involved a multiplicity of vendors, systems and services being delivered from ‘data centres’. The rooms that these systems inhabited became ever more crowded and required ever more power. Chip manufacturers were turning up the heat, literally, by ever- increasing CPU clock speeds and these rooms struggled to cope. The data centre, as a professionally managed facility, began to evolve. Initially, air conditioning systems and power systems were borrowed from other industries, but soon, in the 2000s, data centre facilities were targeted by the manufacturers and specialised equipment began appearing, catering for the specific role of cooling IT systems. www.intelligentdatacentres.com