Welcome to Compass Media, brought to you by Compass Datacenters. We build for what’s next.
In this episode, Raymond Hawkins sits down with Ed Socia, North American Insight Director for datacenterHawk. With a background in community development and sustainability from the University of Vermont, Ed transitioned from managing renewable research platforms to working with top data center teams, including a pivotal role at CBRE.The conversation explores the transformative impact of the pandemic on the data industry, driving remote work and digital transformation. Ed discusses the increased demand for data centers, fueled by technologies like AI, and the resulting power constraints in emerging markets. The dialogue transitions into the complexities of power location planning, the potential of nuclear energy for data centers, and the hurdles posed by regulatory and community acceptance.Ed and Raymond highlight the roles of utilities and tech companies in addressing power demands, emphasizing transparent development and long lead times. They also touch on tracking competitor strategies and the importance of market intelligence.
Today, host Raymond Hawkins chats with Mike Netzer, VP of Sales at datacenterHawk, a professional with a diverse background, from managing pension portfolios to diving deep into the data center industry. Originating from the Northeast with stints in Idaho, Connecticut, Florida, and Texas, Mike brings a rich mix of experiences and insights to the table.The dialogue meticulously covers a range of timely topics concerning the data center industry. Mike and Raymond delve into the increasing demands on power generation driven by growing data center capacities and touch upon the economic shifts brought on by large tech deals, specifically in the realms of Artificial Intelligence (AI). The significance of viewing data centers as critical infrastructure similar to roads and water treatment facilities is comprehensively analyzed, reflecting on their indispensable role in modern societies. The discussion further explores the impact of AI on technological advancements, the potential adaptability of nuclear energy in data centers, and the broader implications of energy pricing on the industry's economic viability.
In this Memorial Day special episode, host Raymond Hawkins holds a profound conversation with seasoned data center experts Garett Jaco, a Marine Corps veteran with a strong background in nuclear weapons security and marine security, and Wayne Watson, vice president of North American operations at Compass Datacenters, with a past in the Navy as a nuclear electrician.The dialogue dives into the intersection of military experience and data center proficiency. Tapping into their naval and military backgrounds, Watson and Jaco discuss the transferable skills that veterans bring to the industry, focusing on meticulous attention to detail and the importance of procedure adherence in handling critical equipment.The episode also explores the personal army stories, illuminating the lighter side of their service, and the conversation turns toward the serious topic of mental wellness within the industry.Thoughts on Memorial Day close the conversation, honoring war fighters' sacrifices and advocating for support and de-stigmatization of mental illness post-combat. Overall, this exchange offers a unique perspective on the untapped talent of veterans in the data center sphere and the essential correlation between military service and industry excellence.
In this engaging episode, Raymond Hawkins, the Chief Revenue Officer at Compass, is joined by George Rockett, the founder of DatacenterDynamics & Co-Founder of Yotta.George shares his journey from being a humble advertising salesperson to the inception of DatacenterDynamics magazine in 1998. Their conversation unfolds to cover the evolution of enterprise data centers, the burst of the .com bubble, and the concept of zero downtime. The historical context of data centers and the early days of technology are discussed, shedding light on the industry's development and perception over time.With some fantastic analogies, the episode delves into topics such as systems thinking, integrating polymaths to address industry challenges, and the urgency for quicker action due to vast opportunities. George presents his innovative endeavor, Yotta, and stresses the unification of language and communication within the digital infrastructure industry. George's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/george-rockett-b18a3b4/?originalSubdomain=uk
In this discussion, Raymond Hawkins, Chief Revenue Officer at Compass Datacenters engages with Phanney Kim Brevard, Chief Strategy Officer and newly appointed Chief Information Officer, of ETAP-Operation Technology at Schneider Electric. The conversation delves into the complex world of data center management and electrical systems. ETAP, a hardware-agnostic software company acquired by Schneider, specializes in designing and simulating electrical systems for various industries, with a focus on energy optimization, compliance, and safety.The dialogue touches upon the significance of digital twins in modeling and simulating electrical systems, providing real-time insights and ensuring operational efficiency. The hardware-agnostic nature of Etap's solutions is emphasized, allowing connectivity with diverse power systems. The conversation also highlights the importance of a centralized platform for stakeholders in the data center value chain, ensuring a shared and accurate version of the truth. The episode concludes with a reflection on the evolving landscape of technology and the transformative impact of digital twins on electrical system management. Overall, the discussion offers valuable insights into the critical role of innovative software solutions in enhancing the safety, sustainability, and efficiency of data center operations.Phanney's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/phanneykimbrevard/
In this episode, Raymond dives back into the world of college football as the playoffs take center stage. Joined by esteemed guests Mike Baudendistel, Director of Sales for the Data Center sector at Bloom Energy, and Buddy Rizer, the Executive Director of Economic Development in Loudoun County, Virginia, the episode promises a lively discussion on the recent playoff selections.As the first week of December unfolds, we take a break from the tech talk to share insights on the college football landscape. From Michigan's anticipated presence to the controversies surrounding Florida State's exclusion, Raymond, Mike, and Buddy provide a unique blend of humor and expertise.Join the conversation as they break down the committee's decisions, discuss the surprises and snubs, and prophesize the outcomes of the season. Whether you're a die-hard football fan or just looking for a fun departure from the data center discussions, this episode promises some good old fashion sports banter.
In this episode, we dive into the world of data centers, and their energy consumption, with Govi Ramasamy, Executive Director & Power Generation for Data Centers at Cummins Inc. Govi is a distinguished authority in the realm of data center sustainability and energy efficiency, bringing over two decades of expertise to the table.With degrees in Mechanical and Industrial Engineering and an MBA from Northwestern University, Govi's career has been dedicated to unraveling the complex challenges posed by data center energy use. He has been at the forefront of developing innovative solutions to reduce environmental impacts while enhancing operational efficiency.Govi sheds light on the evolving landscape of data center technology. From advancements in cooling and power management to the latest trends in renewable energy integration, he discusses the dynamic strategies being employed to make data centers more sustainable.They then talk about the critical importance of optimizing data center energy consumption, particularly in the digital age. His extensive knowledge and forward-thinking ideas make this episode essential for those intrigued by the energy dynamics of data centers and their profound implications for our environment and technology-driven world.Govi's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/goviramasamy/
In this episode, Data Center and Technology Expert Bill Kleyman joins the show.After 15 years in the technology space, Bill has the chance to see quite the endless advancements. Today, he works with leaders in digital infrastructure to help build a more sustainable and inclusive future and support an ever-connected digital society. He is also a contributing editor to leading industry publications, including Data Center Frontier, Data Center Knowledge, ITPro Today, and InformationWeek.Today they discuss the evolution of generative AI, but before they get there, Bill tells the fascinating story of his journey to America, fleeing a dangerous radioactive Kiev after the Chernobyl fallout in the late 1980s. They then discuss the incredible advancements we're seeing in generative AI, and how that can help in a myriad of ways across data centers, technology, health, and everything in between.To connect with Bill, visit his website (https://billkleyman.com/) and connect with him on LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/in/billkleyman/).
On this episode of Not Your Father's Datacenter, Raymond Hawkins is joined by Jerry Burum, Steve Flaig, Jimmy Fordham, and special guest Haley Hawkins for an in-depth discussion on the upcoming college football season.Discussion points include conference realignment, predictions for the upcoming college football season, who will win each major conference, and Heisman picks. Listen in as they forecast the 2023-24 college football season.
Today, David Liggitt joins the show to talk about data center expansion.David Liggitt is the Founder of and CEO at datacenterHawk, helping data center professionals make the best decisions possible. With over 15 years in commercial real estate and extensive experience navigating the data center industry, David understands the communication between data center providers, users, vendors, investors, and consultants.Today they discuss expansion into major markets across the US, as well as into international areas around the globe, while accommodating the need for power to run these processes. They touch on the introduction of AI into the marketplace and the future of data centers across the world.Connect with David here: https://www.linkedin.com/in/davidliggitt/
On today's episode, Raymond sits down with Erin Torbiak, General Manager at Addicting Games.Hailing from Alberta, Canada, Erin has had a long career as a developer and is now the general manager of the ever-popular Addicting Games website. The site is a directory of sorts full of quick, engaging games to pass the time, while Erin is also a Full-Stack Developer at TeachMe - a gamifying system to produce educational content for students.Raymond and Erin discuss the road the industry has taken and pay tribute to some of the great games that helped shape the industry where it is today, like Tetris. They look at the future of these gaming capabilities and where education sits in that pile.To learn more about Erin, head to her LinkedIn page here: https://www.linkedin.com/in/erin-torbiak-56415869/
In this episode of Not Your Father's Data Center, Raymond sits down with Dr Arnold Glass, Professor of Psychology at Rutgers University to discuss the impacts of technology in the classroom.With a PhD in Psychology from Stanford University, Dr Glass has been working in the cognitive neuroscience of learning field, with a focus on the science of instruction. Recently, his focus has been on the effects technology has on the learning process and ability of college students.In a fascinating discussion, Raymond and Dr Glass explore the impacts technology has on students, comparing his findings from the classroom 15 years ago to now, and how detrimental multitasking has become in college lectures.You can connect with Dr Arnold Glass on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/arnold-glass-6134825/Or connect via his Professor page on the Rutger's University website: https://psych.rutgers.edu/faculty-profiles-a-contacts/98-arnold-glass
The increasing power consumption of data centers and the subsequent challenges of powering and cooling them have emerged as significant concerns for industry professionals. The quest for sustainability in the field is increasingly urgent, given that data centers are estimated to consume about 50 times more power than traditional offices, and the reliance on fossil fuels and hydrocarbons is unsustainable in the long term.On this episode of Not Your Father's Data Center, host Raymond Hawkins welcomes Steven Hill, an independent datacenter analyst and writer, for an insightful discussion on this pressing issue. They delved into Hill's unique journey, from a professional photographer photographing ore carriers, cranes, and Packers games, to a leading voice in the datacenter industry. They also explored hydrogen as a potential solution to these challenges, despite its high reactivity and flammability and its low energy volume.Their discussion further unfolded into… Hill's transition from professional photography to datacenter analysis The burgeoning focus on data center sustainability The role of hydrogen as a potential fuel source in the datacenter industry The challenges posed by increasing demand for computing power and growing data center density Different types of hydrogen and their potential uses in the industry The increasing adoption of multicore processors and virtualization in data centers The criticism faced by the data center industry for high power consumption and the increasing demand for sustainable electricity Steven Hill is an independent datacenter analyst and writer. He has charted an unconventional career path, transitioning from professional photography to the datacenter industry, where he now applies his analytical skills to examine and write about the pressing issues facing the industry.
The 7×24 Exchange International is known for its conferences and helping companies and organizations from several industries, such as manufacturing and technology, collaborate and share information to improve. It's a premier group which data center professionals can benefit from quite a bit of information. What are the advantages of the 7x24 Conference, and what does planning it entail? For an episode of Not Your Father's Data Center podcast, host Raymond Hawkins interviewed Bob Cassiliano, Chairman and CEO of the 7×24 Exchange International — a nonprofit education forum aimed at helping companies in various sectors overcome challenges. The two talked about the creation of 7x24, its growth over the years, and changes and improvements made to its annual conferences. Hawkins and Cassiliano also went on to discuss … The earlier years of 7x24 and his background with the company The mission and goals the conferences aim to achieve What goes into strategizing and planning these conferences for success “We look towards four aspects that we think deliver the differentiation for us. The number one is the content; we always try to put together a program that is of high quality with top notch presenters. The venue where we take them, we go to four- and five-star resorts, and we do that because over the years through our evaluations it became very obvious where the attendees like to be - we also look at how the attendees are treated right …,” said Cassiliano. He added the welcoming aspect of the event is a further display of the type of hospitality they aim to offer and provide at the 7x24 conference. “The thing we are most proud of, and we really believe really differentiates us from everybody, is how guest-friendly we are. So, if you attend the conference and you bring a guest, that guest is allowed to attend our welcome reception on Sunday night, the conference keynote on Monday morning, any nighttime events that we have, as well as the Wednesday morning breakfast,” said Cassiliano. Bob Cassiliano is the Chairman and CEO of the 7×24 Exchange International. He's been with 7x24 since 1990, which was formerly called the Uninterruptible Uptime Users Group when he joined. He became CEO in 2011 and has held the role since. Cassiliano is a graduate of New York City College of Technology where he earned a degree in electrical technology.
Burnout is a familiar concept in the tech field, with 40 percent of workers saying they want to quit due to stress, fatigue, and poor work-life balance. This can be especially true for startup companies, which face challenges and uncertainties that can place added stress on employees. But one company, Yerbo, is seeking to change that. On today's episode of Not Your Father's Data Center by Compass Datacenters, podcast host Raymond Hawkins, speaks with Francisco Vieira Mendes, Co-Founder and Head of Growth at Yerbo, about the origins of his company and what services they offer to tackle employee burnout in the tech world. Mendes explained the value Yerbo's assessments can bring to the table to change an organization when leaders share their own results with the team. “It's really important that those of you that are listening that are leaders of an organization or leaders within a team—even if it's just a two-person team—it's important that you show by example…If you show that we're open to discuss those items, if you bring your results…that's really important.” Mended went on to add “Because if you feel psychologically safe to be able to share that, that's going to be very loud for your team, because your team is going to realize, ‘All right, I can share this because if you share this with me, maybe I can share this with him or her.'” Francisco Vieira Mendes is a marketing professional who has a passion for helping Latin American startups grow. He is Co-Founder and Head of Growth at Yerbo and has served in past roles such as a Class Lead for KURIOS, VP of Marketing at treble.ai, and Director of Product-Led Growth at CleverTap. Mendes earned a bachelor's degree in Marketing from the Instituto Superior de Contabilidade e Administração do Porto and a Master's degree in Attendance and Computer Science from Faculdade de Engenharia da Universidade do Porto.
The phrase “energy crisis” has been tossed around frequently the past few years, and not without reason: as demand for fossil fuels skyrockets, climate change speeds up too. So while the U.S. puts legislation into place to help mitigate the climate crisis, there's another problem in the process - our energy grid might not be able to keep up with these environmentally friendly power alternatives. What happens now? On the latest episode of Not Your Father's Data Center Podcast, CRO and host Raymond Hawkins chats with the Vice President of Global Data Center Sales with Bloom Energy, Jeff Barber, about the energy crisis, ESG, and Bloom Energy. The two discuss: Why reducing your carbon footprint now adds time-value How Bloom Energy offers an alternative that lasts into the future What Bloom Energy is, how it generates power, and what their power-purchase agreement looks like “So, Bloom energy is solid-oxide fuel cells that are on-site, at your facility, in a micro-grid form. So this is power-generation at your facility, without the centralized grid, with the centralized grid…Bloom is intended to create energy for the facility, to be the primary energy to that facility, 24/7 365,” explained Barber, noting that these are not batteries. A California native, Barber has collected over 25 years of experience in the energy, sales, and data center industries. Though he first started working on network troubleshooting through the G-Tech Corporation as a Network Support and DEC VAX System Administrator, Barber has since held leadership positions at a number of globally recognized brands, including Hewlett-Packard, the EMC Corporation, and Oracle. Prior to joining Bloom, Barber was a Partner & EVP Sales and Business Development leader for Prime Data Centers. He is a graduate of California State University at Sacramento, with a BS in Business Administration.
In 2022, nearly 21% of persons with a disability were employed, but were much less likely to be employed than a person with no disability. For one company, however, people with disabilities are an untapped talent pool with lots of potential. Growing their data labeling and AI business, Enabled Intelligence looks to build an inclusive environment for those with neurodivergence, as they see what others might not be able to. On this episode of Not Your Father's Data Center Podcast, CRO and host Raymond Hawkins, chats with Chief People Officer of Enabled Intelligence, Lauren Bacon Smith, about neurodiversity, data labeling, and AI. The two discuss: How tapping into the talent pool of neurodivergent people led Enabled Intelligence to success How Enabled Intelligence is growing their core business How AI modeling helps label the dataset faster “Yeah, so we actually have a data science team in-house now where we are actually creating some of our own models, so we are kind of having that full life-cycle where we have also done data curation, so clients coming to us, a lot of times have their data already, but we have the ability…to actually go out, get the data, prepare it, annotate it, and then we also are able to create and test our own models,” explained Bacon Smith. Lauren Bacon Smith holds over a decade of experience in program management, human resources, and recruitment. Starting her career in the hospitality and service industry, Bacon Smith spent eight years with Hilton Worldwide as the Senior Manager for Military Programs before joining Enabled Intelligence as the Chief People Officer to help continue fostering a culture of inclusion.
By providing the infrastructure required to store, process, and transport enormous amounts of data, supporting a wide range of applications and services, data centers in general play a crucial role in the digital economy. The "Data Center Capital of the World" title sometimes makes reference to Loudoun County in Virginia, which is a popular location for data centers. The county has become a desirable location for data center development due to its close proximity to Washington, D.C., its dependable power system, strong fiber-optic network, and its advantageous tax incentives. The Executive Director of Loudoun County, Virginia Economic Development, Buddy Rizer, was the guest on this edition of the "Not Your Father's Center Data Podcast," hosted by Raymond Hawkins, CEO of Compass Datacenters. According to Buddy, “Data centers allowed us to cut our tax rate to 89 cents last year, which means less pressure on homeowners to pay their loans. Additionally, we were able to construct a variety of schools, invest up to a billion dollars in road infrastructure, and extend the Washington D.C. Metro to Loudoun which in turn provides great jobs and services.” Buddy Rizer is the Executive Director for the Department of Economic Development in Loudoun County, Virginia, which was named the 2021 Economic Development Organization of the Year by the International Economic Development Council. He leads the agency responsible for encouraging growth and developing relationships with Loudoun's business community in both the commercial and agricultural-based business sectors. During his tenure, Rizer and his team have attracted more than $40 billion in new commercial investment and more than 50 thousand new jobs.
Jonathan Friedmann knew the semiconductor business would find its way into his life someday. Friedmann, CEO & Founder of Speedata, spoke to Raymond Hawkins about his career and his latest venture, Speedata, which provides a state-of-the-art Analytics Processing Unit to optimize big data and analytics workloads. While data growth is expanding at an exponential rate, processing speeds are lagging behind. Multiple cores on a single chip were a first-step industry solution, data centers were the next. Many data companies utilize clusters of hundreds and thousands of nodes to solve their complex processing needs. Friedmann's Speedata solution offers a different approach. “Speedata is looking at a workload that is arguably the biggest workload in the data center today, databases and analytics,” Friedmann said, “Essentially, you have a database, and multiple industries hold their information in databases, and then they want to extract information from them. And you look at the public clouds; they are giving multiple managed services to handle that. The biggest and most important managed services in the world you find are all databases and analytics.” With the knowledge that big data is a large part of the processing need, Friedmann and Speedata designed a chip to target this specific workload, “Today, 99% of big data is processed by the CPU,” Friedmann said. That's a large slice of the pie for Speedata to tap into and lessen the burden, “You look at what's happening in the analytics and databases; the first revolution did not happen yet.” Data isn't just coming from the outside. Computers are generating synthetic data, creating even more need for processing solutions. Friedmann equates what Speedata is doing as acting as plumbers. They're building the tools and making the pipes wider so companies can better extract their data.
Born, raised, and educated in Germany, Carsten Baumann, Solution Architect and Director of Strategic Initiatives at Schneider Electric, calls the United States his home these days. Baumann's travels took many different routes, from a town outside of Frankfurt to the glitz of Los Angeles and now a quiet, more rural ZIP code in Colorado. But one constant remained: engineering. Baumann spoke with Raymond Hawkins about his journey and career in systems engineering. Schneider Electric does some exciting work with Compass Datacenters utilizing microgrids, something Baumann knows inside and out. As recent as five years ago, Baumann said many people in the data center world had no idea what microgrids were. A lot's changed since then. “The definition of a microgrid has evolved, but as we understand it now, it's something where we have a combination of distributed energy resources, like local energy generation assets we can use in case a grid goes down,” Baumann said. Baumann said microgrids solve three critical issues in the data center world. “One is greater resiliency, which we all want in a data center. Number two, which is a huge factor as well and becoming more and more prevalent and important, is sustainability,” Baumann said. “And the third one is overall, of course, cost and cost benefits. Ideally, we want to have everything. We want to be more sustainable; we have greater resiliency, and it ought to be cheaper.” Today, the education around microgrids is growing, and Baumann said potential data center customers want specifics around how microgrids can help them and the best approach they should take. “I believe site selection for data centers will expand the criteria to meet sustainability aspects,” he said. “Being able to do onsite power generation when the electricity is expensive, we may be able to produce it cheaper ourselves and more sustainable, so the carbon intensity of our own electricity is less than the carbon intensity of the electricity we buy from the utility company.”
The world is in an energy crisis caused by many events affecting billions. Yet, while others are focusing on how this might affect oil & gas prices, the critical piece missing from the news is how this will involve a business that helps lift the entire market: data centers. So, what impact will the crisis have on data centers, and what is the forecast for the industry heading into 2023? On the newest episode of Not Your Father's Data Center podcast, host Raymond Hawkins engages with returning guest Andrew Jay, Executive Director of Data Centre Solutions, Advisory, & Transaction Services EMEA CBRE. The two review… What is affecting the data center market, including the investment market, geopolitics, and the energy crisis How data centers are coping with and preparing for challenges now and into the future The future of the market, particularly the outlook for data centers into 2023 “...What we're trying to do is very much bring the end users to the table with the public authorities and say, ‘Look, how do we sort this out together?'...,” said Jay. Jay is the Head of Data Centre Solutions with EMEA Advisory at CBRE and has been with CBRE for over 23 years. CBRE is a London-based worldwide commercial real estate services and investment company.
Like most people involved with Data Centers, Andy Lawrence, Executive Director of Research at Uptime Institute, didn't start his career that way; Lawrence's beginning was IT. As a journalist covering all things IT, Lawrence gravitated to the economic and ecological impacts, which led to his interest in data centers. He joined ‘the Hawk', Raymond Hawkins, to talk about his career and discuss some of the power challenges faced in the DC industry. As the head of research at Uptime, Lawrence said there's a lot of client interest in the efficiency and efficiency of data storage facilities. “There's obviously a lot of energy being consumed in the IT side, so I feel now there's starting to be an awareness of how we actually start to tackle that.” With an awareness that things need to change, executive management in the IT industry is signaling to its investors a move towards carbon-neutral policies. The problem? Saying it ‘net zero' and getting there are two different things. So, when the decree to go carbon neutral comes down from the top to the data centers, the data centers turn to Lawrence and his team at Uptime for help. If the goal is to get to carbon neutral without significant reliance on offsets, how should data centers be thought of as stewards of the energy they use? Lawrence felt there was no easy answer, but the data storage industry should work harder to promote its value to the overall IT sector. There is a misconception that data storage centers account for a much more significant percentage of overall global energy usage than they do. But there are various regions and countries where the average is much higher, and there is work to be done to reduce those numbers.
Who doesn't love a sequel? Raymond Hawkins sure does, and back by popular demand for another episode of fantastic industry insights, Fred Thiel, CEO of Marathon Digital Holdings, joined the Hawk to talk about all sorts of things. Top of mind was how current events are shaping the crypto community and how crypto could impact the events unfolding in Europe. The current state of affairs could provide a new test for digital currency. Thiel pointed out in past wars; displaced citizens did not have many options for moving their money. “Crypto provides a unique thing in this world where sanctions have become essentially a weapon and weaponized,” Thiel said. In the matter of the war in Ukraine, the United States and its allies have used sanctions to shut off Russian access to banks. The only other bearer asset available for many people and businesses in this scenario is Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. One might ask if Crypto is a solution to transferring assets, could Russia use crypto to avoid sanctions? Thiel said that the daily trading of cryptocurrency and the total market cap prevents this idea from being scalable. “As a tool for sanction evasion, Bitcoin is not a good option,” Thiel stated. Since the start of the war in Ukraine, one trend is the decoupling of the correlation between bitcoin and equities. “All of a sudden, now there was a real use case for bitcoin that was very actual and urgent, and so you started seeing bitcoin move in the opposite direction of equities. Even bitcoin-related stocks which track the price of bitcoin started moving separately. So, there were days when the Dow and the Nasdaq would go down, yet bitcoin would go up, and you saw the Nasdaq-traded, bitcoin-related stocks, Like Marathon, for example, move in lockstep with bitcoin.”
The summer of 2021 brought news of Texas and Oklahoma leaving the Big 12 for the SEC. This summer USC and UCLA rocked the landscape of college conferences once again. The schools announced they would leave the Pac-12 to join the Big Ten. The deserted conferences are shifting the narrative to expansion for survival. After the summer 21 news from Texas and Oklahoma, it's become clear that two conferences are working to separate. Elias Ellefsen said, “I love the move for USC and UCLA. I'm a big fan of the big conferences.” West coast football in the Big Ten will certainly make waves. “It's an interesting move. Typically I think of west coast football as high-paced. I think it will bring an interesting dynamic to the league,” said Steve Skyes. Others argued that the success of USC and UCL would make the Big Ten ‘The conference of champions.” What's to come for the future of NCAA conferences is difficult to know. Will conferences survive, implode, or expand? Raymond Hawkins, the podcast host, said, “We're not going to continue with five powerhouses, five conferences forever.” Kenny Nguyen pointed out the weakness of the Pac-12 in the wake of the news. “Pac 12 right now, it feels like it's bleeding a little bit. If Washington and Oregon dip, what do you have left?” questioned Nguyen. The debate continues to consider how media drives these changes and the potential of only having two to three leagues. This group's conference champion predictions favor Baylor, Ohio State, Alabama, and Utah. There's a rich insight into specific players, coaches, and each conference. Listen to Not Your Father's Data Center Podcast on Spotify or Apple.
The Hawk's talk went nuclear again. Raymond Hawkins brought on Dr. Everett Redmond. A Senior Technical Advisor of New Reactors and Advanced Technology at the Nuclear Energy Institute, Dr. Redmond joined the show for a fascinating talk on nuclear energy and energy in general for the data center industry. Dr. Redmond studied nuclear engineering at MIT, and along with scuba diving, his passion is nuclear energy. Diving in, only some pun intended, to the world of bitcoin, Dr. Redmond said there was a tie-in between crypto and nuclear energy. “Last year, we saw a number of Bitcoin companies make agreements with reactor companies. In one case, with a new reactor vendor. They're looking for that clean, carbon-free energy to power their mining operations, and so you're seeing those connections.” Dr. Redmond touched on some new nuclear-related projects occurring in the United States,“There's a company called New Scale developing a new light water, water- cooled reactor,” Dr. Redmond continued, “They've teamed up with UAMPS (Utah Associated Municipal Power Systems.) They plan to build an Idaho national laboratory and be operational by 2029. And then you have a couple of other companies, TerraPower and X-energy, awarded projects by the Department of Energy.” These projects will bring nuclear power to Wyoming for the first time and expand carbon-free energy production in Washington. With a blossoming of new nuclear energy projects afoot, Hawkins wanted to know the viability of data centers teaming up with nuclear power to provide carbon-free energy to data storage. Dr. Redmond was clear: nuclear energy tends to go where the need is, and often that is if there are regulatory requirements to meet carbon-neutral goals. He noted that some companies with long-range plans are looking at ways nuclear energy can be part of the equation to provide energy solutions in the future.
The hats he wears are many: Chairman & Founder of Infrastructure Masons (iMason,) CEO of Virtual Power Systems, Co-Host of The Next Wave Podcast, and Founder & CEO of a strategic advisory and consulting service for Startups, Fortune 500 companies, and Investment firms. One might call him a living legend in the data storage space. Back by popular demand, Dean Nelson joined Not Your Father's Data Center for another tremendous conversation with host Raymond Hawkins. Nelson queued up some significant trends in the data storage space since his last visit that he was itching to discuss. “If you think about our industry, today we have 7 million data center locations,” Nelson said. “These are places that have some type of compute in them. And there's about 104 gigawatts of capacity built. That's capacity that could be used. From a consumption standpoint, there's 594 terawatt-hours of consumption. If you now equate that, that's 2.4% of the total energy draw globally. Through iMasons, we created this baseline on purpose. And what it includes is three categories. So, digital infrastructure, in general, is providers, networks, and crypto.” Breaking down these categories helps define where the energy usage is going and how Nelson and his iMasons can find new ways to maximize the consumption of that capacity. Even within the 594 terawatt-hours of consumption, Nelson said not all of that energy is consumed at once. Only roughly 67 gigawatts of the 104 gigawatts of power get consumed. That leaves at least 37 gigawatts unused around the globe. “And why is that,” Nelson asked. “That's because of buffers and buffers, and everything else that happens from enterprise applications to cloud to data centers and everybody saving to ensure that they don't have an issue.”
How did a Texas boy, who swore up and down he'd never leave Texas for Oklahoma, wind up involved with the data storage industry in Oklahoma? Chris Brown, CTO at Uptime Institute, isn't 100% sure himself, but spending the past 25 years in the Sooner state means something went right. And Brown said the data center life treated him well so far. “I was fortunate enough to get into some different companies in times when they were doing a lot of work and a lot of changes,” Brown said. “So, it allowed me to get thirty years of experience in about ten or fifteen years. And I've enjoyed working in the industry, and I look forward to many more years to come.” And with Brown's passion for data centers limitless, he knew he eventually wanted a role where he could help other industries increase their data center capacity and knowledge. Brown's journey led to the Uptime Institute. “Once again, most opportunities are those are surprises rather than things that are planned,” Brown said. After a stint working for Saber Company and a few other related mechanical engineering data center opportunities, a friend from his past called him up to join the Uptime Institute to help them with some engineering challenges. Over the past twelve years, Brown worked his way from consultant to CTO. “When I started at Uptime Institute, there were four people delivering the technical work, and they were all US-based,” Brown said. “Today, we have thirty-four engineers scattered across thirteen different countries and still growing. It's definitely changed a lot. But the data center industry's changed a lot. When I first started (in the industry), chilled water plants were the norm because the electrical power that was required to run a chill water plant was about 25% of what it would be with direct expansion.” Technological advancements in direct expansion today make that method much more affordable.
Rick Ward, CTO, and Founder of Orbits Edge, described how space is becoming increasingly accessible to laypeople. “We're getting more and more to the place where I can see myself there. And that is a big deal. You don't have a space-bearing civilization when the only people who go up there are less numerous than Olympic gold medalists.” Ward and Raymond Hawkins, Chief Revenue Officer of Compass Data Centers, discussed this increasing accessibility in the context of data on Part Two of “Data Centers in Space” on Not Your Father's Data Center Podcast. Orbits Edge uses high-power compute in space before sending data to Earth. Mass amounts of data are captured, but there is a bottleneck in the transportation. Ward said, “Image capture is haystack generation, compute is needle finding,” said Ward. If you can only transport a fraction of the data haystack, it needs to be the high-quality “needles.” Data is shipped to countries through bands that have varying reliabilities and throughputs. A low-orbit satellite may conduct with a ground station for a certain distance, then have a fuzzy connection for another distance, and finally have no connectivity for several kilometers until it reaches the next ground station. High, dry locations are best for ground station connectivity. “What it comes down to is intermittent connectivity of variable throughputs of various windows of connectivity,” said Ward. Data is then transported from the ground station to a data center. Some ground stations have antennas to reduce the fiber run distance. Orbits Edge satellites range from the size of a dorm mini-fridge to the size of a regular fridge and weigh about 200 kilos. Despite the small size, Ward predicted that satellite data will play an increasingly heavy role in space and research stations, crystallography, space metallurgy, and ceramics.
Rick Ward, CTO, and Founder of Orbits Edge, described how space is becoming increasingly accessible to laypeople. “We're getting more and more to the place where I can see myself there. And that is a big deal. You don't have a space-bearing civilization when the only people who go up there are less numerous than Olympic gold medalists.” Ward and Raymond Hawkins, Chief Revenue Officer of Compass Data Centers, discussed this increasing accessibility in the context of data on Part Two of “Data Centers in Space” on Not Your Father's Data Center Podcast. Orbits Edge uses high-power compute in space before sending data to Earth. Mass amounts of data are captured, but there is a bottleneck in the transportation. Ward said, “Image capture is haystack generation, compute is needle finding,” said Ward. If you can only transport a fraction of the data haystack, it needs to be the high-quality “needles.” Data is shipped to countries through bands that have varying reliabilities and throughputs. A low-orbit satellite may conduct with a ground station for a certain distance, then have a fuzzy connection for another distance, and finally have no connectivity for several kilometers until it reaches the next ground station. High, dry locations are best for ground station connectivity. “What it comes down to is intermittent connectivity of variable throughputs of various windows of connectivity,” said Ward. Data is then transported from the ground station to a data center. Some ground stations have antennas to reduce the fiber run distance. Orbits Edge satellites range from the size of a dorm mini-fridge to the size of a regular fridge and weigh about 200 kilos. Despite the small size, Ward predicted that satellite data will play an increasingly heavy role in space and research stations, crystallography, space metallurgy, and ceramics.
International trade law expert reveals the difficult yet satisfying work that the CCIA performs to keep tech at consumers' fingertips.
Host Raymond Hawkins switches up the usual topic of data to bring listeners a lively discussion of March Madness picks.
The data center industry is probably not the first industry one would think of when it comes to changes from the pandemic since data is stored virtually. Tim Huffman, Vice President of CBRE, joined Host Raymond Hawkins, Chief Revenue Officer of Compass Datacenters, to discuss the surprising number of shifts that actually occurred in the industry.
Data has moved from the building filling mainframes of the 60's technology to satellite gathering machine learning and AI processing at the speed of light. Megabytes have turned into Petabytes, leaving businesses to absorb the paradigm shift of data collection. In this episode of Not Your Father's Data Center, host Raymond Hawkins and Doug Mohney, Editor-in-Chief of Space IT Bridge, look at the explosive growth of using satellites for data monitoring and collection. The intersection of space and IT technology offers an inexpensive and exponential increase in satellite data gathering capabilities. Ray and Doug explore the growth and use of satellites and assist everything from remote broadband communications to countries' infrastructure security. Businesses are collecting more data than ever before. And instead of mainframes, they're using the cloud and, in a growing number of cases, constellations of satellites for communication and tracking of transportation. As a result, there has been a shift from mainframes towards the rapidly expanding availability of satellite technology. The development of reusable rockets has assisted this shift to satellites. As a result, satellites traveling 400 miles above the earth provide capabilities and technology to deliver broadband to the entire world. "Satellite is going to help connectivity. With current satellite technology, there can be near fiber broadband technology anywhere in the world," Mohney explained. "This is promising because it allows [cloud services, technology, and communication] to developing countries."
Host Raymond Hawkins discovered that despite lacking formal leadership training, Cy Wakeman, President & Founder of Reality Based Leadership, has written a plethora of books in the leadership genre. As a former counselor in human psychology, Wakeman revamped traditional leadership views. She explained, “I saw the world from a viewpoint of shared accountability at the time that most people were seeing the world as the leader was really responsible for the wellbeing of their employees.” According to Wakeman, an individual can experience the same organization differently depending on their accountability. When “high accountables” are in pain, they question their role and how to address deficits. After addressing their role, what remains falls on the organization. “Low-accountables,” on the other hand, hold more of a victim mindset and first point to the organization as the source of their pain. Wakeman began implementing these ideas through reality-based leadership training to healthcare businesses that were losing money. Soon, other organizations began to request training. Wakeman has since built upon her training philosophy with many other essential concepts. For example, she emphasized that “A lot of people believe their circumstances are the reason they can't succeed. Your circumstances are the realty in which you must succeed.” Thinking inside of the box given the restraints to achieve a goal is a must. Leaders are key to this; they help move the ‘why we can't' to ‘how we could.'” Perhaps Wakeman's most important point is this: “True resilience is not about being the smartest or how much perseverance you have, it lies in the collective genius—have the best network of positive relationships, ask for help, and be vulnerable.” These concepts only touch the tip of the iceburg. For more details, you can reference Wakeman's books, visit realtybasedleadership.com, sign up for her newsletter, or follow @cywakeham.
Fred Thiel, CEO of Marathon Digital Holdings, one of the largest bitcoin mining operations in North America, joined host Raymond Hawkins to discuss cryptocurrency. From blockchain to bitcoin, Thiel covered it all, including all the nooks and crannies in between. “The blockchain is essentially a chain of linked blocks that each block consists of a certain number of transactions,” Thiel said. “If you think about a ledger, like your check register, if you have a checkbook and you write a bunch of checks, you write them down in your check register at the month you get a statement from your bank. So, those types of transactions are formed into blocks. The underlying software for the blockchain allows miners to do this process of assembling these transactions into blocks. Then you run a mathematical cryptographical proof on this data, and that generates a hash. And that hash has to have a certain value to it. And when it gets that hash, it then has to be equal to or less than a specific target number that the blockchain is looking for.” Miners who guess that number correctly will win the block, publish the block, other nodes validate the block, and then the miner will receive a block award. In the high-stakes game of blockchain mining, with limited numbers of bitcoin issued per day, Thiel said there is a competition to it. “If you have one miner, and you plug it in, you're not going to get a fraction of a bitcoin every day,” Thiel said. “And so what miners do is, miners, pool their miners together. And aggregating and cooperating, a group of miners in a pool, you have a more hash-rate you're contributing to the overall network, and a higher likelihood you're going to win blocks, and the block rewards can be evenly distributed amongst members of the pool.”
On this episode of Not Your Father's Data Center, a Compass Datacenters Podcast, Host Raymond Hawkins talked with Amit Serper, Vice President of Security Research for North America of Guardicore, the segmentation company disrupting the legacy firewall market, whose software-only approach is decoupled from the physical network, providing a faster alternative to firewalls. While most teenagers were busy worrying about the school dance or making a sports team, Serper was preoccupied with selling security and internet services out of his childhood bedroom. In the early 2000s, cable internet had been rolling out in Israel, and he lucked out as part of the beta test. The company installed an uncapped cable connection in his house, so he had high-speed internet. Eventually, the cable company slowed down his connection; however, he hacked the system and returned it to its faster speed. This is also around the time he started to do things on a computer besides gaming. He had three computers in his bedroom and built three servers with multiple operating systems. He then began selling web hosting packages that ran on the servers. The name of his first business? Evil Cheese. “I had this service running for two or three years,” Serper said. “At one point, my parents started getting weird calls from the cable company telling them ‘there's very high upload usage and asking if there's anything that the cable company should know about.'” His parents didn't have any idea what was going on, and Serper played dumb. Eventually, the cable company slowed his speed, and he had to close shop, but his passion for computers launched his career. Starting at this ripe age and around the dot com boom, Serper became a hacker and reverse engineer. He joined the Israeli Intelligence Community at 18, where he worked on vulnerability research and exploit development to designing architectures of uniquely complicated, highly reliable, one-of-a-kind communication systems.
When the world thinks about ethical AI, thoughts wander to movie portrayals of intelligent machines used for nefarious reasons. In the real world, that's still a possibility, but many point to AI as the future of understanding data. Sharing his thoughts on the subject, Peter Judge, Head Editor of Datacenter Dynamics, joined host Raymond Hawkins on Not Your Father's Data Center. Judge recently authored a feature story in the publication about AI and its problems. Judge explained the concept of ethical AI, “When you have a system that can calculate and think, you have to understand the algorithms behind it and why it's coming to such conclusions. It's as much about the people using it than the AI itself.” AI isn't going to produce “wrong” conclusions, but it may not answer the questions intended. “The ethical part is about how it's being used, not the technology,” Judge said. He pointed to the example of lung x-rays to determine which patients had COVID. “A professor looked into this, and the AI couldn't diagnose because the training data wasn't accurate and there were other issues.” The promise of AI was to churn through mountains of data and drive answers, but AI does what it's programmed to do. It's not sentient, so the proximity for human error is abundant. “Increasing the size of the haystack doesn't mean you'll find the needle,” Judge commented. The other area of ethics is deployment for good or possibly evil. Judge noted the example of AI analyzing online interactions and activities, then using its learning to target advertising that was much more on the unethical side. AI is important to the future, but the humans programming and using it are still on ethically shaky ground.
Isn't the first rule in data centers not to get the servers wet? They're kind of like Gremlins in that way. But someone forgot to tell Daniel Pope this fact. Pope, the CEO of Submer, thinks data servers belong submerged in liquid. He was thrilled to speak to host Raymond Hawkins about his immersion cooling technology, which provides a new green approach to data centers, on this episode of Not Your Father's Data Center. Born and raised in England and now residing in Barcelona, Pope began his career at 16 when he started his first data center. Beginning with a single server in his bedroom, Pope grew his business to more than 20,000 servers. With his expertise in data centers set, Pope now loves the challenge of pushing technology and the industry further. Today's increasing demands on data centers pose a cooling challenge – one Pope knew he wanted to solve. And that set him off to help develop immersion cooling technology, the solution Submer focuses on today. “Instead of cooling the electronics and the server components with air, we leverage a dielectric fluid, a nonconductive fluid, which captures and transports the heat in a much more efficient way than air,” Pope said. The initial challenge for Pope was how to use this technology to cool the racks without disrupting the rest of the data haul and data center design. “And, now, further into this journey, we're looking at it from the whole data center point of view,” Pope said. Pope's immersion cooling system works for solid-state drives, NVMe, flash drives and helium-sealed drives. Immersion cooling reduces IT power load in the center by removing all the fans from the servers. And, from a density perspective, the density is ten-fold. “We are deploying immersion tanks that are in the range of 100kw that operate with extremely warm water, which means the overall facility PUE (power usage effectiveness) is reduced to around 1.04 to 1.05,” Pope said. And that PUE number is before the energy savings from the fan removal are calculated.
On this episode of Not Your Father's Data Center, a Compass Datacenters Podcast, host Raymond Hawkins talked with Dr. Robert Sutor, Chief Quantum Exponent at IBM Research, about how quantum computing will partner with modern computing and what changes this will have for the world.
On this episode of Not Your Father's Data Center, a podcast From Compass Data Centers, host Raymond Hawkins talked with Rich Miller, Founder and Editor of Data Center Frontier, a digital publication that covers the data center industry and “tells the story of the digital economy through the facilities that power the cloud and the people who build them.”
In the data center world, when one mentions a backup power generator, one assumes diesel. Enchanted Rock Chief Commercial Officer Allan Schurr said it's time to think differently. Enchanted Rock's solution is one powered by natural gas.
It is hard to believe, but there is a significant amount of megawatts that goes unused in global data centers. On this episode of the Not Your Father's Data Center Podcast, Host Raymond Hawkins of Compass Data Centers talked with Dean Nelson, the CEO of Virtual Power Systems. Nelson talked about his work at Uber and Sun Systems. This led down the path of Nelson's work at Virtual Power Systems, where they "believe that digital infrastructure is the foundation for an equitable and inclusive world, where every person on the planet participates in the digital economy." In acting upon this vision, VPS unlocks stranded power in data centers. What's staggering to Nelson – and why he thinks this is such important work – is that, through research, VPS found 35,000 megawatts of capacity globally in the data center industry. They checked this data through multiple vectors. Of the capacity, 10,000 megawatts are stranded. This leads to a host of issues, one of which is increasing the carbon footprint unnecessarily. "How much embedded carbon do we add every time we perpetuate that problem and build another data center that's 50% utilized?," Nelson asked. The goal through technology at Virtual Power Systems is to utilize this space. Data centers build such an extensive infrastructure with low utilization to make headroom and safety create into the center. They want to make sure they have the buffer room when things don't go right in the system. "It's the cumulative effect of everyone's buffer," Hawkins said, referring to the sheer amount of space unused.
The phrase, ‘The future is now,' without question, applies to quantum computers. What was not so long ago a science fiction fantasy is now a reality that's not only closer than one might think, it's here. Dr. Bob Sutor, a technical leader in the IT industry, working for IBM for over thirty years, joined Raymond Hawkins for an exciting talk about quantum computing, how it works, and how this revolutionary technology is poised to change the future of computing.
Host Raymond Hawkins found time to pull himself away from watching The Masters to chat with Schneider Electric's Vice President of Innovation and Data Centers, Steven Carlini, for an insider's peek at Schneider's approach to data centers and innovation.
The modern world is driven by data and our ability to analyze it, and the final frontier – space – provides an overwhelming amount of data just waiting to help us understand and commercialize what lies beyond our planet. However, the current infrastructure needs a boost to help us get there. At OrbitsEdge, CTO and Co-founder Rick Ward and the rest of the team think they've identified the missing link. Just as edge network solutions are empowering robust connectivity and data capture on earth, the company believes it could do the same in space.
AI and machine learning are common terms, but they are complex with many applications. Understanding this is critical, and Not Your Father's Data Center Podcast is back to unpack the terms with guest Zachary Lipton. Lipton is an Assistant Professor of Operations Research and Machine Learning at Carnegie Mellon, where he runs the Approximately Correct Machine Intelligence Lab.
Carrie Goetz, Chief Information Technology Officer at StrategITcom, International Keynote Speaker, STEM evangelist and podcaster, turned the tables on host Raymond Hawkins by dubbing this podcast episode “Not Your Mother's Data Center.” And, in honor of Goetz, a long-time Mississippi resident, Hawkins unveiled his first-ever trivia contest.
Nancy Novak, Chief Innovation Officer, Compass Datacenters is a firm believer that innovation comes in different forms, and she knows it's people, processes and systems that drive innovations. Those three key focuses drive Novak's work at Compass Datacenters, and she opened up to host Raymond Hawkins about some of the exciting innovations happening at Compass. Novak's concentration is on improving the data center construction process. She noted that process efficiencies on the job site hadn't improved much over the years, even as the technology and building processes have. “A lot of people will be like, ‘Wait a minute, we do offsite componentry, we do prefab, we do other things that help us,'” Novak said. “I agree with that, but it's 100% not normalized in our business, and it's done kind of on the fringes. I'm trying to get us to normalize those processes.” Creating innovations isn't something done alone in a box. Novak relies on a multitude of ideas from various people. People drive the best ideas and make necessary process improvements. And it isn't just diversity in ethnicity in people that's important; it's also diversity in the experience. “And in our industry, we have all of them,” Novak said. “I focus on collaborating with all the different layers within our industry.” Concrete is an important building material in the data center construction process. But what Novak and her team look at is ways to improve that process to make it more efficient, stronger and more sustainable. “There are so many advantages to concrete,” Novak said. “It's affordable. It's readily available. It's fireproof. CarbonCure is one of the things that helps supplement the cement part of it.” And Novak mentioned other technologies could be layered on to this process to make it even more sustainable.
Digital infrastructure is a common term in the data center industry, but it wasn't always. So, how did the industry evolve to the notion that technology is infrastructure? It's been a long journey, buoyed by investment. To talk about the financial aspect of data centers, host Raymond Hawkins spoke with Irtiaz Ahmad, Head of Global Data Center Banking at Barclays. Ahmed has spent the last 15 years focused on the industry as an advisor, investor and operator. Prior to Barclays, he spent time at CitiGroup and Waller Capital Partners, watching the world of technology accelerate and change.