More than three hundred people attended the Tech Summit,
and I congratulate organizers for attracting such a large audience. Of the
people I met, most came from the IT side and had to cope with facility issues.
I heard resounding recommendations for a small firm called RT Kistler and repeatedly heard vendors
evaluated for the quality of their design services. These participants did not recognize the names
of many of the large organizations that dominate discussions at large national
conferences, although they are dealing with similar issues. At the end of the
day, strategies like economization, monitoring, and even cloud seemed too
exotic and expensive to help them solve problems. I hope Mission Critical
gained some new readers from my trip, and our efforts to extend the reach of
industry experts and educators benefit them all.
I’m just back
from the 7x24Exchange, which was another in a series of successful industry
events. 7x24Exchange organizers tell me that more than 700 industry figures
participated in a 3-1/2 day event that featured a contrarian perspective on
energy from Robert Kennedy, Jr., a report on
space weather from Alex Young, a solar astrophysicist at NASA’s Goddard
Space Flight Center, and several excellent presentations on University
of Chicago, UPS, eBay, and
Yahoo
projects. I hope to bring coverage of many of these projects to a wider
readership in these pages in upcoming issues.
I also enjoyed a
presentation by the Uptime Institute’s Pitt Turner entitled Uptime -
Data Center Issues: Past, Present, and Phuture. Event organizers also did
the industry a real service by offering free on-site training to attendees for
the DOE
Data Center Energy Practitioner (DCEP) Training and Certificate Exam.
Magnus Heerlin also reported on the state of the program.
You can read
more about these individual sessions and even the food at Dave Ohara’s blog.
I'm
looking forward to a similar good experience at DatacenterDynamics
on June 30 in San Francisco. I realize that my blog sometimes resembles a
travelogue, but events like these shows often include input from people
bringing change to the industry. As I have previously written, the
DatacenterDynamics folks make use of their extensive industry contracts to host
sessions that can be considered newsworthy. Past examples include the
announcement of incentives from NYSERDA and a federal end-use lease program. I
see some tremendous session in a full-day,
four track program that makes this event very promising. Key sessions
include Don Beaty (DLB Associates) and Robin Steinbrecher of Intel’s discussion
of the new TC 9.9 Standard. Promising, too, is a presentation entitled GSA Report:
Energy Efficient Modular Data Center Procurement Guide.
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