
House reports on tech monopolies: Here's what it says about Amazon Web Services
Democrats ask whether we should break up big tech
Democrats ask whether we should break up big tech
Princeton Digital Group talks growth and what it plans to do next
Innovations and strategies to go green in Asia
Aligned Energy sounds like an electric utility, but CEO Andrew Schaap says it can serve any size of colo customer thanks to innovative cooling and strong backing
Just remember that it will get better
The biggest wholesale data center company in the world, Digital Realty, has ambitions to dominate other sectors
As a hyperscaler, you only have a small number of customers to deal with - but they are very exacting
As Singapore slows down, the region looks set to build more data centers
In a world dominated by US and Chinese providers, does the world need a European cloud player to preserve privacy? OVHcloud’s CEO, Michel Paulin, talks to DCD
You can't have a pipeline of new talent unless they know you are there, and you speak their language
Data center hub at a crossroad
...and why it thinks it will succeed
We can’t fix what we don’t understand
Users who shuffle between cloud and their own servers may end up over-paying, and some Edge use cases have been over-sold, seven industry leaders told DCD's San Francisco event
Hyperscalers are on the rise with breakneck growth in APAC
xScale marks the spot
The population of India is set to overtake China in 2024, and data center operators are noticing
Colocation used to be about renting space in racks. Now providers want to sell a whole hall at a time
Doug Adams discusses balancing colo and cloud demand, as well as what it's like to work under NTT
An all-you-can-eat buffet of Intel news
We all know Intel for its chips, but perhaps we should be paying more attention to its data centers
Major cloud providers are arriving to Indonesia. What does that mean for the development of the local infrastructure market?
Data center experts share their predictions for the year ahead, with focus on Indonesia, Malaysia, Hong Kong and Singapore
All around the world, data center builders are finding they have to build upwards, creating new opportunities and challenges
While customers increasingly seek out multi-cloud solutions, Western companies might prefer to stick with what they know
Hong Kong and Singapore struggle with success; Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand keep growing their data center footprint
Japan has long maintained its traditions, in culture and in business, keeping its data center service market sheltered from the rest of the world. But a changing cloud landscape has opened the floodgates for foreign companies to feast on the country’s highly developed digital economy
Finding fresh talent to operate data centers is tough enough, and the industry is growing fast