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Wednesday, May 12, 2010 11:30am - 12:00pm

 

 

Traditionally, power, cooling, and utilization have been monitored and managed separately by three primary groups in the organization – IT/IS management, facilities management and the C-suite (i.e., CIO, CFO and CEO).  Each constituent dedicated to maximizing the data center and its assets, in addition to managing expense, but each coming at it from separate corners with very little, if any, inter-communications.  Because of this, even the most sophisticated organizations are in a sense, running blind and scared – wondering how much headroom is left and whether or not they are living on borrowed time.  

Consequently, the data center is often identified as a cause for stagnation of growth, as it is believed that it will shortly be out of power, cooling, or both.  Or perhaps worse, significant equipment and application investments are made that cannot be accommodated in the data center because these resources are now in fact depleted. Or conversely, building margin or headroom into the planning of new resources, that optimization suffers. 

Attendees of this presentation will learn: 

-       Why current energy productivity management methodologies that focus on how power is delivered to the data center are missing the mark; and why the future will be dedicated to understanding why it is being consumed.

-       Why data center management needs productivity solutions that enable them to tie their applications to the specific IT equipment that supports them (solutions that include modeling, mapping, and business criticality analysis will be highlighted).

-       How proper energy productivity monitoring and management can impact both operational and capital expenses (real world case study examples will be used to show how to balance power, cooling, and utilization in order to save money, enhance service levels, and dramatically extend the life of their data center and its assets).