Discover how i3 Solutions is making headlines in the industry press
Bringing Power flexibility to cloud-scale and wholesale data centres
ARP meets some of the biggest challenges faced by hyperscale, wholesale, and colocation data centers.
Flexible data center power ‘as a service’ in the world of Cloud?
Enterprise user adoption of cloud services is rapidly accelerating in a crowded and highly competitive supply-side market
The power is there, use IT!
Too much power capacity in data centres is going to waste – Ed Ansett, chairman, i3 Solutions. From an engineering standpoint, data centres exist to deliver IT workloads in a […]
Bringing power flexibility to cloud-scale and wholesale data centres
Ed Ansett, Chairman, i3 Solutions, discusses how Adaptable Redundant Power (ARP) meets some of the biggest challenges faced by the hyperscale, wholesale and colocation data centre market.
How Adaptive Redundant Power changes the power game for data centres
Adaptable Redundant Power (ARP) meets some of the biggest challenges faced by the hyperscale, wholesale and colocation data centre markets.
Is too much power capacity in data centres going to waste?
Ed Ansett, Chairman, i3 Solutions, says changing to a dynamic power design is key to eliminating waste and maximising power utilisation
Flexible power in cloud and wholesale data centers? It can be done
A technique to meet some of the biggest challenges faced by the hyperscale, wholesale and colocation data center market
Rules Rewritten: Managing Data Centers Through the Pandemic
The world’s data center operators have made big operating adjustments. Some of these changes may stick around post-crisis.
Data centres and dirty fuel – the forces pushing facilities to back away from diesel
Customer demands, regulation and the outcry against GHG emissions may make a switch from diesel standby to gas generation a timely move for data centres. (Page 51)
The changing landscape of data centre energy storage
Emerging energy storage technologies signal radical changes for data centre power. Ed Ansett, Founder and Chairman, i3 Solutions Group, discusses the future of the data centre industry with a focus on data centre energy storage developments and emerging technologies.
Will natural gas replace diesel as a data center power source?
Natural Gas (NG) generators are becoming cost competitive with diesel generators and have a better greenhouse gas emission profile
Ireland’s DC sector set to be the next world leader in sustainable power
Ireland’s data centre sector is uniquely positioned to lead the world in sustainable power, Ed Ansett, founder and chairman at i3 Solutions Group explains how.
The changing landscape of data centre energy storage
Experts at i3 Solutions break down the ever-evolving context surrounging data centre energy storage solutions.
The changing landscape of data centre energy storage
In the drive for Green House Gas abatement and net zero operation, every energy storage option at source, grid, switch, battery, UPS and generator back up in data centres is changing.
Panel: What's the answer to the power over-provisioned data center? And what is the bigger opportunity?
What’s the answer to the power over-provisioned data centre? and which is the bigger opportunity? As peak demands rise, a risk averse approach can result in upwards of 40% of drawn power being stranded in the layers of data centre redundancy.
If you missed our Founder and Chairman Ed Ansett discuss on Datacenter Dynamics alongside Uptime Institute, Electric Power Institute and Equinix, you can watch the panel discussion on-demand now
The case for gas engine standby generators in data centres and what it means for the future of diesel
i3 Solutions Group and EYP Mission Critical Facilities GHG Abatement Group Second White Paper details why we need standby power and why natural gas blended with hydrogen could be the fuel of choice for the next decade.
Who accounts for the economic and carbon cost of Saas data centre power?
Ed Ansett, Co-Founder and Chariman of i3 Solutions Group, discuesses the position of SaaS providers who act as both customer and supplier. He explores whether power use is rishing up the agenda for SaaS companies and their customers and asks if not, why not?