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datacenter.bib
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@misc{noauthor_data_nodate-sp20-516-236,
title = {Data {Center} {Carbon} {Footprint} {Comparison} {Calculator}},
url = {https://www.se.com/ww/en/work/solutions/system/s1/data-center-and-network-systems/trade-off-tools/data-center-carbon-footprint-comparison-calculator/},
urldate = {2020-02-27}
}
@misc{noauthor_io_nodate-sp20-516-236,
title = {{IO} {Data} {Centers} {Opens} its {Phoenix} {ONE} {Data} {Center}},
url = {https://www.io.com/press-releases/io-data-centers-opens-its-phoenix-one-data-center/},
abstract = {IO Data Centers, the premier provider of data center solutions, held a grand opening ceremony for its 538,000 square-foot Phoenix ONE Data Center facility today.},
language = {en-US},
urldate = {2020-02-27},
journal = {IO.com}
}
@misc{noauthor_largest_nodate-sp20-516-236,
title = {Largest {Data} {Centers}: i/o {Data} {Centers}, {Microsoft} {\textbar} {Data} {Center} {Knowledge}},
url = {https://www.datacenterknowledge.com/special-report-the-worlds-largest-data-centers/largest-data-centers-io-data-centers-microsoft},
urldate = {2020-02-27}
}
@misc{noauthor_renewable_2020-sp20-516-236,
title = {Renewable energy in {Germany}},
copyright = {Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License},
url = {https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Renewable_energy_in_Germany&oldid=941774896},
abstract = {Renewable energy in Germany is mainly based on wind, solar and biomass. Germany had the world's largest photovoltaic installed capacity until 2014, and as of 2020 it has 49 GW. It is also the world's third country by installed wind power capacity, at 59 GW in 2018, and second for offshore wind, with over 4 GW. Germany has been called "the world's first major renewable energy economy".The share of renewable electricity rose from just 3.4\% of gross electricity consumption in 1990 to exceed 10\% by 2005, and reaching 46.3\% of consumption in 2019.
As with most countries, the transition to renewable energy in the transport and heating and cooling sectors has been considerably slower.
According to official figures, around 370,000 people were employed in the renewable energy sector in 2010, particularly in small and medium-sized companies. This is over twice the number of jobs in 2004 (160,500). About two-thirds of these jobs are attributed to the Renewable Energy Sources Act.Germany's federal government is working to increase renewable energy commercialization, with a particular focus on offshore wind farms.
A major challenge is the development of sufficient network capacities for transmitting the power generated in the North Sea to the large industrial consumers in southern parts of the country. Germany's energy transition, the Energiewende, designates a significant change in energy policy from 2011.
The term encompasses a reorientation of policy from demand to supply and a shift from centralized to distributed generation (for example, producing heat and power in very small cogeneration units), which should replace overproduction and avoidable energy consumption with energy-saving measures and increased efficiency.},
language = {en},
urldate = {2020-02-27},
journal = {Wikipedia},
month = feb,
year = {2020},
note = {Page Version ID: 941774896}
}
@misc{noauthor_what_nodate-sp20-516-236,
title = {What is {Immersion} {Cooling}?},
url = {https://submer.com/blog/what-is-immersion-cooling},
abstract = {Submer Technologies launches its Immersion Cooling solution, a higly efficient, eco-friendly method to cool IT Hardware achieving unprecedented densities.},
urldate = {2020-02-27}
}
@misc{noauthor_it_2017-sp20-516-236,
title = {It {Doesn}'t {Take} a {Supercomputer} to {Justify} {Liquid} {Cooling}},
url = {https://www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/2017/05/22/rdhx-systems-help-with-high-density-data-center-cooling},
abstract = {How rear-door heat exchangers solve the high-density data center problem},
language = {en},
urldate = {2020-02-27},
journal = {Data Center Knowledge},
month = may,
year = {2017}
}
@misc{noauthor_internet_nodate-sp20-516-236,
title = {The {Internet} {Cloud}'s {Dirty} {Secret}: {It} {Consumes} {Tons} of {Energy}, {Has} {Large} {Carbon} {Footprint}},
shorttitle = {The {Internet} {Cloud}'s {Dirty} {Secret}},
url = {https://fortune.com/2019/09/18/internet-cloud-server-data-center-energy-consumption-renewable-coal/},
abstract = {Computer servers store website data, share it with other computers and create the magic of the virtual world. It also consumes very real energy resources.},
language = {en},
urldate = {2020-02-27},
journal = {Fortune}
}
@misc{ranger_google:_nodate-sp20-516-236,
title = {Google: 1.6 million solar panels will power these new data centres},
shorttitle = {Google},
url = {https://www.zdnet.com/article/google-1-6-million-solar-panels-will-power-these-new-data-centres/},
abstract = {The two solar farms will be able to produce around 150 megawatts each and will be the largest solar farms ever to be built for Google.},
language = {en},
urldate = {2020-02-27},
journal = {ZDNet},
author = {Ranger, Steve}
}
@misc{noauthor_setting_2019-sp20-516-236,
title = {Setting {Realistic} {Goals} for {Powering} {Data} {Centers} {With} {Renewable} {Energy}},
url = {https://www.datacenterknowledge.com/industry-perspectives/setting-realistic-goals-powering-data-centers-renewable-energy},
abstract = {Why 20-percent-renewable by 2025 is achievable, and how we can get there.},
language = {en},
urldate = {2020-02-27},
journal = {Data Center Knowledge},
month = dec,
year = {2019}
}
@misc{at_18:39_microsoft_nodate-sp20-516-236,
title = {Microsoft reveals train of mistakes that killed {Azure} in the {South} {Central} {US} 'incident'},
url = {https://www.theregister.co.uk/2018/09/17/azure_outage_report/},
abstract = {Thunderbolt and lightning, Azure outage frightening},
language = {en},
urldate = {2020-02-27},
author = {at 18:39, Richard Speed 17 Sep 2018}
}
@misc{mackie_microsoft_nodate-sp20-516-236,
title = {Microsoft {Explains} {Sept}. 4 {Service} {Outage} at {Texas} {Datacenter} -- {Redmondmag}.com},
url = {https://redmondmag.com/articles/2018/09/11/microsoft-explains-sept-4-outage.aspx},
abstract = {The Visual Studio team on Monday issued a postmortem analysis for a Sept. 4 service outage that happened in Microsoft's U.S. South Central region.},
language = {en-US},
urldate = {2020-02-27},
journal = {Redmondmag},
author = {Mackie, By Kurt and {09/11/2018}}
}
@misc{noauthor_service_nodate-sp20-516-236,
title = {Service {Blog} - {Azure} {DevOps}},
url = {https://devblogs.microsoft.com/devopsservice},
language = {en-US},
urldate = {2020-02-27},
journal = {Azure DevOps Service}
}
@misc{foley_microsoft_nodate-sp20-516-236,
title = {Microsoft {South} {Central} {US} datacenter outage takes down a number of cloud services},
url = {https://www.zdnet.com/article/microsoft-south-central-u-s-datacenter-outage-takes-down-a-number-of-cloud-services/},
abstract = {A cooling problem in Microsoft's South Central U.S. data center seems to be causing issues for a number of Microsoft Cloud services users in the U.S. and beyond.},
language = {en},
urldate = {2020-02-27},
journal = {ZDNet},
author = {Foley, Mary Jo}
}
@Comment{jabref-meta: databaseType:bibtex;}