Data Centre Magazine October 2020 | Page 47

“ As organisations rapidly keep pace with growing sets of information and data , they ’ re also adopting more advanced applications to generate greater insights with digital transformation efforts ”

“ As organisations rapidly keep pace with growing sets of information and data , they ’ re also adopting more advanced applications to generate greater insights with digital transformation efforts ”

— Ashley Gorakhpurwalla , Dell
processing capabilities . There are many different types of servers , from mail servers and web servers to virtual and cloud servers , each performing different functions with their own advantages , drawbacks and specialisations .
If steel and steam were the backbone of the first industrial revolution , data and the servers that house it are the driving force behind the ongoing evolution of Industry 4.0 . The evolution of the data centre , and the servers that comprise them , began back in the 1970s and 80s , when a single computer typically had significantly less processing power than a 2009 Toyota Prius and took up an entire room . According to a report by Verdict , “ Two key technologies were critical to the first formations of data centres as we think of them today . Both occurred in the early 1980s ; the first was the advent of personal computers ( PCs ), which proliferated as Microsoft ’ s Windows operating software became the global standard . The second was the development of the network system protocol by Sun Microsystems , which enabled PC users to access network files . Thereafter , microcomputers begin to fill out mainframe rooms as servers , and the rooms become known as data centres .” Since then , quantum leaps in processing power , an explosion of data generation
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