The Wall Street Journal wonders whether tech landlords like Digital Realty Trust will be hurt by tenant quality in another tech setback. It's a legitimate concern, but the demand drivers and business models supporting the current data center boom...
The federal govenment is scouting locations in Charlotte and Research Triangle for a future data center for the Social Security Administration.
TeleGeography says Level 3's big trans-Atlantic capacity buy indicates that bandwidth prices have hit bottom.
New York City is the largest market for colo space, according to TeleGeography.
Tampa colo provider E Solutions has purchased the former Genuity data center, doubling its square footage.
The University of Michigan will invest $15 million to retrofit a data center for its high-demand computing applications.
Steadfast Networks is expanding into a new data center at the Lakeside Technology center in Chicago.
ACS has taken itself off the market after talks to sell the company to a group of private equity firms ended without a deal.
Ron Hughes lays out the case for a second data center boom. Is this the realization of the railroad analogy?