Liquid cooling stories
The deal deepens Vertiv's ability to support AI data centres as rising chip heat makes liquid cooling harder to design and validate.
The split design could help firms train larger AI models faster while cutting costs and response times for production workloads.
UK data centre operators gain a retrofit-friendly route to higher AI rack densities, with pilot deployments now open for a liquid cooling system.
Cloud and AI demand is driving heavy investment in new facilities, with the global market forecast to more than triple by 2034.
Liquid cooling is moving into mainstream data centre design as AI workloads push operators to curb power use and manage rising heat.
Rising AI heat loads are sharpening demand for liquid cooling, with the firm saying its patent portfolio could help data centre operators cut energy use.
Gamers and workstation builders gain more choice as the glass-fronted chassis supports GPUs up to 450 mm and radiators up to 420 mm.
Rising AI power and cooling demands are pushing operators towards open hardware as Legrand adds rack, power and thermal gear for dense sites.
The funding backs a push into AI data centres, where better network control could lift model utilisation and cut token costs.
AI-driven power and cooling needs are widening Asia Pacific data centre costs, with Japan and Singapore now far above Taiwan, a report says.
The deal lifts Datacom’s New Zealand sovereign data centres to five, as it adds Auckland capacity for AI-ready workloads and local customer continuity.
The new debt gives the data centre operator fresh firepower to expand US capacity as cloud and AI demand strains supply.
The benchmark suggests AI data centres could boost compute output by 15% without using water, easing power and cooling pressure.
Demand for AI-ready capacity is driving a third 42MW building at Edged's Atlanta campus, with waterless cooling and all three sites leased.
The five-year deal will give Swedish researchers and smaller firms cloud-style access to AI infrastructure as demand for Mimer grows.
Rising e-waste and AI demand are pushing firms to pair secure device reuse with lower-impact data centre engineering.
Operators of AI-heavy data centres can now cool up to 60kW per unit with Airsys's new system, which cuts compressor strain and space needs.
Demand for AI and cloud services in India is driving fresh infrastructure investment as Equinix adds capacity in Mumbai with MB3.
Arizona’s water-stressed data centre market gets a new 36 MW AI site in Mesa that uses zero water for cooling and aims to save 138 million gallons a year.
India's PC builders get two new air coolers, one with a real-time temperature display, as Consistent widens its components range.