What is a data center

 What is a data center?

The data center is a physical facility where critical applications and data are hosted by organizations. Applications and data are shared through a network of compute and memory resources in data centers. An application delivery controller is one of the key components of the data center. Data centers also include routers, switches, firewalls, storage systems, and servers.


Why are data centers important to businesses?

IT data centers are designed to support a wide range of business applications and activities, including:


Email and file sharing

Productivity apps

Customer Relationship Management (CRM)

Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) and Database

Big data, artificial intelligence and machine learning

Virtual desktops, communication and collaboration services


Types of data centers

Business data centers

They are created, owned and used by companies for their own internal computing needs. A data center for an enterprise is customized and housed on the premises of the organization that owns it.

Managed Data Center Services

Managed data centers are installed, managed and controlled by independent service providers. Companies choose a leasing model and can access data center functions and capabilities through a service management platform. Equipment and infrastructure don't have to be purchased, so there is no need to purchase them.

Colocation data centers

Colocation data centers allow businesses to rent space in a physically remote facility that houses infrastructure, including power, cooling and security. The company provides and manages its own components such as computer hardware and servers.

Cloud data centers

This is a remote data center option. Businesses can access resources over the Internet by renting infrastructure hosted by a third-party service provider.

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