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Why is Tier
III So Important?
All
of Newwebsite.com's servers are located in southwest
Virginia at the
OnePartner ATAC.
There are only 3 certified Tier III and 2 certified Tier
IV commercial data centers in the entire world. Only
one is located in the USA. All the other famous data
centers in the USA such as Rackspace, The Planet and
Peak 10 have not been certified to meet any Tier
standard.
Is there really a difference between a data center that
claims to be "N+1" and one that has a Tier
certification?
N+1 data center redundancy is when a data center has at
least 2 of everything, including power feeds,
generators, UPS systems and cooling units. Using this
model, a data center can have a failure in a piece of
equipment without downtime. This model also supports
periodic maintenance of the power and cooling systems
without any data center downtime.
Many data centers claim N+1 but are they really?
Who has certified them?
Any time you’re choosing between one vendor and another,
whether you’re buying airline tickets or hosting space,
you need to know if there’s someone, besides the vendor,
who stands behind that service. Most people wouldn’t get
on an airplane if there were no third-party auditing of
safety, maintenance and the pilot’s capabilities.
Without qualified third-party review, who catches the
design flaws and single points of failure in a data
center’s power infrastructure? Unfortunately for those
who select uncertified data centers, these
single-points-of-failure are discovered by hundreds or
thousands of customers at the same time, when the center
goes down.
We collect
outage
reports from the news and
sites like
Data Center
Knowledge. There are data
centers that you’ll easily recognize on the
outage
report. Some of them with
several outages within a year, or even within a week’s
time.
Is there a logical justification for a data center
vendor to reassure customers after an outage that does
not include a commitment to obtain certification by The
Uptime Institute?
Consider that data centers cost tens of millions to
build. Should anyone invest millions in a data center
and then decide against a certification process that a)
will catch any design oversights and b) clearly
communicate capabilities to prospective customers when
the cost of certification is only a small fraction of
this investment? Perhaps vendors that have cut corners,
or are uncertain that their facility would certify at
the level they would like customers to assume, would
resist certification.
Julian Kudritzki, VP of Development & Operations for The
Uptime Institute, shares that in December two
established data centers, which had both long claimed
Tier IV, “or close to it”, went through the
certification process. Both of these data centers
received a Tier I certification, which they both chose
not to publish.
Julian indicates that many more data centers go through
the certification process than publish their results. If
the costs of leasing space in a facility with a
certified design, such as OnePartner’s ATAC data center,
were more costly than space in an uncertified data
center, companies would need to evaluate the actual
needs of their applications. While few companies would
eagerly sacrifice uptime, a substantial price difference
might require a trade-off. However, when OnePartner
offers rates that match or beat competitive rates, the
trade-off is unnecessary.
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