Switch, the operator of the SuperNAP in Las Vegas, had its strongest month ever in September, selling 533 cabinets of colocation space and 7.6 MVA of power over a single 30-day time period, the company said today.
Nevada officials want your data to stay in Vegas. Or perhaps Reno, or other areas of the state, which is touting data centers as a growth sector as it seeks to diversify its economy. That effort, built atop the success of the SuperNAP in Las Vegas...
The massive SuperNAP data center was in the spotlight last Thursday evening when it was featured in a report on the CBS Evening News. Switch, the colocation company that built the SuperNAP, is being cited as a symbol of the possible growth...
Switch plans to build a new data center campus in northern Las Vegas, which will add more than 300,000 square feet of mission-critical space for customers seeking redundant IT infrastructure.
Barely two years after completing its massive SuperNAP, Las Vegas data center specialist Switch is building again. The company has begun construction on two new facilities on its Las Vegas campus that will add 600,000 square feet of data center...
Switch plans to build an additional 1.6 million square feet of high-density mission-critical space on land adjacent to its SuperNAP, creating an immense data center hub in Las Vegas spanning more than 2 million square feet.
While some data center developers are standardizing their design and construction process, Switch Communications is building custom equipment for its high-density SuperNAP data center in Las Vegas.
Sun Microsystems (JAVA) will host its new cloud offering in the SuperNAP, Switch Communications' new mega-data center in Las Vegas, according to CTO Greg Papadopoulos.
When the first phase of the SuperNAP opens on Sept. 1, it will be one of the world's most advanced and unique data centers, with the ability to cool racks exceeding 20kW of power load.