Liquid cooling stories
Backed by more than 8GW of powered land, the new unit targets scarce AI campus capacity as demand for power and grid access intensifies.
Demand for AI and cloud capacity is turning Hong Kong into a gateway for firms seeking low-latency access to Mainland China.
Rising demand for AI could strain power grids and leave sustainability targets slipping down boardroom agendas, UK tech leaders warn.
AI operators could bring new capacity online faster, as Delta says its prefabricated system may cut data centre deployment time by 60%.
Gamers and AI users get a wider choice of hardware as the new range spans motherboards, graphics cards, monitors, laptops and external systems.
AI data centres will be able to cool denser racks with less maintenance, as Schneider Electric's new chillers are due to ship from June 2026.
AI operators face a standardised route to megascale sites as Supermicro bundles cooling, power and networking for deployments from 5MW to 1GW.
The 136 MW design could help operators bring high-density AI sites online faster while easing grid strain and cooling bottlenecks.
The 750 MW campus will give AI tenants faster access to power and liquid cooling as US data centre expansion strains grids.
Rising AI demand is pushing operators to redesign facilities around denser racks, heavier power loads and liquid cooling.
The funding will help the London-based firm expand products aimed at easing AI data centre bottlenecks and broaden its industrial platform.
Rising chip heat and rack density are pushing data centre operators towards liquid cooling to curb power use and support larger AI deployments.
Rising demand for computing power and cooling is pushing BenQ's AI push beyond pilots into practical use across factories, hospitals and shops.
Buyers could gain more targeted cooling as the case's three front fans can be angled separately towards the CPU or graphics card.
AI data centres in EMEA are getting a smaller-footprint cooling option as Vertiv rolls out kit designed to ease pressure on cramped facilities.
New Zealand firms gain a local cloud option as OVHCloud opens its first Asia-Pacific zone in Auckland, boosting resilience and data sovereignty.
The design targets hotter GPUs and AI accelerators as data centres struggle to pack more processors into tighter server racks.
Higher AI and cloud demand could lift India's built data centre capacity to 5 GW by 2030, needing nearly USD $25 billion.
The five-year contract should lift IREN's annualised revenue by about USD $1.94 billion once the Childress build-out is fully commissioned.
Electronics makers under pressure from heat-related redesigns can now buy monthly access to senior thermal engineers instead of hiring full-time staff.