From M&A deals, business strategy, startup funding, and regulation to company stocks, stay informed on the latest in the world of data center business.
Week in Review: The data center powering the Super Bowl, more cloud-driven M&A action, an update on Facebook's data center expansion, Amazon S3 cloud stores 262 billion objects.
A look at the innards of financial data centers as well as the details of new data center projects such as those by Microsoft and Verizon were very much of interest to Data Center Knowledge readers during January.
PEER 1 building large UK data center, IBM unveils $42 million cloud center in Canada, Mezolink hooks up with Telx in three markets, Hudson Fiber adds low-latency routes, university chooses Unisys (UIS).
In this video, Intel's Kirk Skaugen talks about the benefits of using 10 Gbigabit Ethernet unified networking and Open FCoE to help simplify data center cabling and networking.
This week's news highlights: Verizon to acquire Terremark for $1.4 billion, Interxion shares gain 6 percent following IPO, Jim Cramer's dismal track record on data center sector sell signals.
Leading data center stocks are sharply higher today as investors buy up shares of Savvis (SVVS), Internap (INAP) and Rackspace (RAX) in the wake of Verizon’s $1.4 billion deal to acquire cloud hosting specialist Terremark.
European IT infrastructure provider Interxion (INXN) has boosted the size of its initial public offering, and its stock will debut at $13 a share, at the top of the previously-announced range.
European colocation provider Interxion Holdings expects shares of its IPO to price in a range between $11 and $13. Interxion's offering is scheduled for Friday on the New York Stock Exchange.
A primer on utility capacity and charges, CoreLink extends deal with Getty Images, data center challenges for fading social sites, consultant says Washington state data center oversized, EMC pulls "Cloud in a Box" video.
Oh boy. Jim Cramer's talking about data center stocks again. So let's look at his track record. For all those investors that followed Cramer's "sell, sell, sell" recommendation in Oct. 2009, here's what you missed.