Intelligent Data Centres Issue 16 | Page 41

INDUSTRY INTELLIGENCE POWERED BY THE DCA INDUSTRY INTELLIGENCE POWERED BY THE DCA tre industry eps its cool Matteo Mezzanotte, PR, Communication and Content Manager, Submer Immersion Cooling, usses the importance of sustainable innovation how such an approach can positively shape the future of the data centre industry. iple leasure of visiting one lands, you probably u unforgettable ical landscapes with nd rocky beaches, d by the Aegean thodox churches e on dry hills of habited only by goats. ek islands almost th white walls and itectural choice is etic reasons alone ry well with tourists. e practical principle n Greece can be very hottest afternoon n, you would be cool the white on the inside – of Let us say that these cording to a ‘cooling’ pt brings us onto ing higher f computational g of IT computing challenge to the ndustry. Data centres trategies and designs to cope with the workloads required by, for example, Artificial Intelligence or any other computation-intensive works like medical imaging, financial modelling, 3D simulations for scientific research, oil and gas exploration, for example. Packing more computing power into IT equipment means boosting the power density of a data centre, but it also means increasing the heat produced by racks and cabinets. An unstoppable growth In the last few years, the data centre industry has witnessed a major change in the global compute capability, with an increasing shift of workloads from on-premise infrastructure to the cloud. A new study revealed that data centres computing output jumped six-fold from 2010 to 2018, with a general energy consumption rise of about 6%. This growth reflects a general, diffused and unstoppable digitalisation process that has regarded small, medium and large enterprises as well as private citizens; ‘data consumers’. And it is reasonable to think that the penetration and adoption of the digital technologies at any level in every area and segment of the society will be boosted whenever a new behaviour pattern arises in the Issue 16 21