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HostingJournalist is your global industry news portal covering the worldwide business of cloud, hosting and data center. With HostingJournalist Insider, companies can self-publish press releases, blogs, events, and more.

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Hosted.com Simplifies WordPress Migrations for Businesses with Free Service When switching hosting providers, whether for better performance, lower costs, or improved support, many small businesses find the process quite complex. Common issues include website downtime, data loss, broken links, and plugin incompatibilities.  ...
31.10.2025 23:24 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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OpenAI, Oracle Plan Multi-Billion-Dollar AI Data Center in Michigan OpenAI, Oracle, and Related Digital have announced plans to build one of the largest new data center campuses in the United States - a more than one-gigawatt facility in Saline Township, Michigan. The multi-billion-dollar project marks a significant expansion of the partnership between OpenAI and Oracle, which previously unveiled ambitions to add 4.5 gigawatts of total capacity under their Stargate initiative. Construction on the Michigan data center site is slated to begin in early 2026, pending regulatory approval. For the three companies involved, the development represents both a technological and strategic milestone. OpenAI and Oracle continue to accelerate the build-out of large-scale AI infrastructure capable of supporting the next generation of generative models, while Related Digital - a vertically integrated data center developer and investment platform - positions itself as a key enabler of hyperscale growth. The Michigan project is intended to anchor Oracle’s growing AI-ready cloud capacity in North America and further the broader national effort to localize AI compute infrastructure. “This historic, multi-billion-dollar investment will ensure that Michigan plays a leading role in developing the digital infrastructure American companies need,” said Jeff T. Blau, CEO of Related Companies and chairman of Related Digital. “We are proud to be developing this critical project exclusively for Oracle and contributing to keeping our nation competitive in the global AI race.” OpenAI described the initiative as part of a deliberate effort to expand AI infrastructure beyond traditional coastal hubs and into regions with strong industrial and energy capabilities. “By expanding Stargate to Michigan, we can strengthen domestic supply chains, create good jobs, and help more communities share in the economic opportunities AI is creating,” said Peter Hoeschele, OpenAI’s Vice President of Industrial Compute. For Oracle, which is aggressively scaling its cloud infrastructure footprint to meet surging AI demand, the Michigan campus is another step toward building geographically distributed capacity. “Historically, Michigan has been at the forefront of innovation and industry in America, and this strong legacy will continue as we work with Related Digital to rapidly expand our cloud capacity,” said Mahesh Thiagarajan, executive vice president at Oracle Cloud Infrastructure. Energy Strategy, Water Efficiency The Saline Township project is being financed through a consortium of private investors and financial institutions. During construction, it is expected to generate more than 2,500 union jobs, with an estimated 450 permanent on-site positions once operational. Related Digital and Oracle anticipate another 1,500 county-wide jobs tied directly to the facility’s operation, along with several thousand indirect roles supporting regional supply chains. The new campus will occupy roughly 250 acres and feature three single-story buildings, each about 550,000 square feet in size. Designed under the working name The Barn - a nod to a preserved red barn that will remain near the Michigan Avenue entrance - the development will pursue LEED certification and include minimum 75-foot setbacks with extensive landscaping and screening. Energy strategy has been a key component of the project’s planning. DTE Energy will supply 100 percent of the site’s power using existing generation assets supplemented by new battery storage built and financed as part of the development. According to DTE, this arrangement will ensure there is no negative impact on existing customers’ energy supply or rates, while the project’s contribution to grid maintenance will help stabilize long-term costs. Water efficiency is also central to the design. The facility will use a closed-loop cooling system, limiting daily water consumption to levels comparable to those of a large office building - an increasingly critical factor in hyperscale site design as data centers expand into regions managing finite water resources. Walbridge, a century-old Detroit-based construction firm, will serve as the project’s general contractor. Brent Behrman, CEO of Related Digital, emphasized his company’s experience delivering large-scale data centers for hyperscalers on time and on budget, adding that the team expects to break ground in early 2026, pending approval from the Michigan Public Service Commission.
31.10.2025 21:59 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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Nokia, Zayo Partner to Build Next-Gen High-Speed Global IP Network Nokia has announced a collaboration with Zayo to deploy a next-generation IP network architecture designed to significantly enhance Zayo’s connectivity capabilities. The initiative aims to deliver faster, more reliable, and more scalable Internet services while expanding Zayo’s ability to support advanced applications such as cloud access, edge computing, and secure high-speed data center interconnections. The partnership would represent a major step in Zayo’s ongoing effort to modernize and expand its global IP backbone, which already spans over 19 million fiber miles and 147,000 route miles. The company’s network connects 400 markets and more than 1,500 on-net data centers worldwide. By leveraging Nokia’s high-performance IP router solutions, Zayo is transitioning to a more modular and scalable architecture that can accommodate surging bandwidth demands and new digital service requirements emerging across industries. The first phase of deployment is already underway in New York and New Jersey, with additional rollouts planned across dozens of markets in the near future. Once fully operational, the project will extend to thousands of new lit buildings, substantially increasing Zayo’s network reach. According to the companies, this transformation will enable Zayo to provision connectivity in new markets at unprecedented speed, reduce exposure to single points of failure, and ensure more resilient performance across its infrastructure. Zayo’s updated IP architecture will be built on Nokia’s FP5-based 7750 Service Router and the 7250 Interconnect Router (IXR). These platforms are designed to support high-capacity transport with energy efficiency and security features optimized for large-scale data and cloud applications. The technology also positions Zayo to deliver 400G and 800G-capable services, meeting growing customer demand for high-performance, low-latency connections that power AI workloads, content delivery, and enterprise cloud migration. Aaron Werley, Senior Vice President of Engineering at Zayo, said the project sets a new benchmark for what fiber-based connectivity can deliver. “By partnering with Nokia, we’re setting a new standard for what’s possible in fiber-based connectivity. The ability to rapidly light up new buildings and markets on our IP network allows us to more quickly respond to customer demand, which is increasingly important in today’s fast-evolving market,” said Mr. Werley. “Nokia’s solution delivers the reliability, performance, and agility we need to meet the growing needs of our customers - from cloud providers and data centers to schools and enterprises.” From Nokia’s perspective, the collaboration underscores the company’s expanding role in modernizing large-scale carrier networks. “This collaboration with Zayo reflects a shared commitment to advancing connectivity and creating new opportunities for digital transformation across industries,” said Jeff Valley, Vice President of IP Networks for CSPs at Nokia. “With our FP5-based platforms and deep expertise in IP networks, we’re enabling Zayo to deploy services faster, simplify operations, and lead the market with flexible, future-ready infrastructure.” By combining Zayo’s extensive global fiber footprint with Nokia’s advanced IP technology, the two companies aim to set a new performance standard for Internet infrastructure - one that will help accelerate the next phase of digital transformation across the cloud, edge, and enterprise sectors.
31.10.2025 21:59 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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DartPoints Joins Nutanix Program to Expand Private Cloud Services DartPoints, a U.S.-based provider of colocation, cloud, and interconnection services, has joined the Nutanix Elevate Service Provider Program, marking a strategic move to enhance its enterprise cloud offerings and solidify its role as a key regional infrastructure player. The partnership positions DartPoints to deliver fully managed, single-tenant private cloud environments built on Nutanix’s hyperconverged infrastructure (HCI) - a platform widely adopted for its ability to unify compute, storage, and networking into a scalable, software-defined architecture. For DartPoints, the Nutanix designation is more than a badge of technical credibility - it signals a deeper alignment with enterprise customers seeking secure, compliant, and high-performance private cloud solutions as part of their hybrid or multi-cloud strategies. The company operates a network of strategically located data centers across the southern and central United States, enabling low-latency access and geographic redundancy for customers with mission-critical workloads. Under the partnership, DartPoints will integrate Nutanix Prism Central for unified cloud management, offering visibility and control across multiple clusters from a single console. The inclusion of Nutanix Flow adds microsegmentation and advanced network security capabilities - features increasingly essential for industries under strict regulatory oversight. These combined technologies allow DartPoints to meet a range of compliance standards, including HIPAA, SOC 1/2/3, PCI-DSS, HITECH, and CSA, making the solution particularly attractive to customers in healthcare, financial services, and government sectors. According to Christian Goffi, Vice President of North American Channel Sales at Nutanix, DartPoints’ participation reflects both technical maturity and market readiness. “DartPoints stands out as a provider that not only delivers robust private cloud solutions but also owns the infrastructure that can help enhance reliability,” said Mr. Goffi. “Their commitment to expanding their cloud portfolio and introducing innovative consumption models aligns perfectly with the vision of the Nutanix Elevate Partner Program.” Multi-Tenant Private Cloud, HPC The collaboration would offer enterprises several advantages: dedicated and fully managed environments supported by DartPoints’ engineering teams, on-demand scalability for variable workloads, and simplified workload migration powered by Nutanix’s orchestration tools. Customers can also benefit from geographic diversity and high availability through DartPoints’ interconnected facilities, ensuring operational continuity even under demanding conditions. Looking ahead, DartPoints plans to extend its Nutanix-powered services by 2026, adding multi-tenant private cloud, high-performance computing, and infrastructure tailored for private generative AI workloads and container orchestration. The roadmap underscores the company’s ambition to cater to next-generation enterprise computing demands, balancing control, security, and flexibility without relying solely on hyperscale public cloud providers. “Our partnership with Nutanix enables us to deliver scalable, secure, and fully managed private cloud environments built for today’s most demanding enterprise use cases - from compliance-heavy industries to AI-driven innovation,” said Brad Alexander, Chief Technology Officer at DartPoints. “We’re redefining what modern infrastructure looks like for organizations that need control, performance, and flexibility beyond what hyperscalers can offer.”
31.10.2025 17:29 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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Equinix Invests £3.9B in Major UK Data Center Expansion Equinix has announced the completion of its acquisition of an 85-acre site in Hertfordshire, United Kingdom, marking the beginning of one of the largest data center investments ever made in the country. The global digital infrastructure company plans to invest £3.9 billion in developing a hyperscale campus that will deliver more than 250 megawatts of compute capacity. This would position the Equinix site as a core component of the UK’s critical national infrastructure and a major step toward its ambition to lead in sovereign artificial intelligence. The Hertfordshire project, previously referred to as Equinix DC01UK, is set to play a central role in enabling Britain’s digital transformation. Once fully operational, it will serve a broad spectrum of industries - including healthcare, life sciences, public services, financial institutions, manufacturing, and entertainment - providing the secure, scalable connectivity needed for AI, cloud, and data-intensive applications. For Equinix, this development represents its largest European investment to date and signals long-term confidence in the UK’s position as a global technology hub. The economic impact is expected to be significant. KPMG estimates the construction of the Hertfordshire campus will directly generate 2,500 local jobs, with more than 200 permanent positions once the facility becomes fully operational. Most of these will be high-skilled roles supporting the technical and operational demands of large-scale data infrastructure. During the construction phase, the Equinix project could inject as much as £3 billion in annual Gross Value Added (GVA) into the UK economy, driven by employment, supply chain activity, and regional investment. Once operational, the campus is expected to contribute around £260 million in annual GVA. Equinix also plans to integrate strong community engagement into its development strategy, including partnerships with local residents, educational institutions, and businesses to support workforce training, biodiversity restoration, and STEM education programs. The company has acquired an additional 10,000-square-metre plot adjacent to the campus for a third data center, expanding total capacity to 30MW across three phases. The first facility, LIS001, is already under development, with service expected to go live by the end of 2025. The second, LIS002, is in the master planning stage and scheduled for completion in 2028. AI Ambitions, Data Center Sustainability Equinix Managing Director for the UK, James Tyler, described the investment as both a technological and social commitment: “The UK is a cornerstone of the global economy and is a natural home for our most substantial investment in Europe to date. This development brings a significant amount of data center capacity to Britain, contributing to the government’s AI growth ambition. But this investment goes far beyond building the infrastructure needed to unlock the UK’s digital potential. It’s the evolution of an ongoing partnership with the local and national community.” The UK government has welcomed the move as a major boost to its digital economy. “This £3.9 billion investment is a huge win for Britain,” said Liz Kendall, Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and Technology. “It will give businesses – from life sciences to high street banks – the ability to connect to thousands of other businesses across the world in an instant, powering our AI ambitions, boosting growth, and creating hundreds of well-paid jobs.” Sustainability remains a cornerstone of Equinix’s plans. All of its European facilities, including those in the UK, already operate on 100% renewable energy, with a global goal to achieve full renewable coverage by 2030. The Hertfordshire campus will feature advanced dry cooling systems to minimize water use - comparable to that of conventional office buildings - and retain more than half of the site as open space. Equinix has also pledged to achieve at least a 10% biodiversity net gain by creating new ecological habitats across the property. Industry leaders see the project as a defining example of the UK’s growing digital maturity. Luisa Cardani, Head of Data Centres at techUK, commented, “This announcement reflects the scale of opportunity the UK has to strengthen its digital foundations. Data centers are the backbone of our economy – they enable innovation, productivity, and growth across every sector. Continued investment in sustainable, resilient digital infrastructure will be critical to delivering on the UK’s ambitions for AI and long-term economic prosperity.” The new campus builds on Equinix’s established presence in the UK, where it already operates 14 data centers serving over 1,300 local customers and 10,000 worldwide. The company employs more than 1,200 people across the country, contributing an estimated £145 million directly to UK household income. As part of its wider sustainability and innovation agenda, all Equinix sites are designed to enable future heat export, allowing excess energy from data center operations to be reused for community or industrial purposes.
31.10.2025 17:29 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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INTROSERV Strengthens Its Advanced Partnership with OVHcloud The Advanced Partner tier grants INTROSERV access to an extended suite of partner benefits – from financial incentives and co-marketing opportunities to exclusive technical support and early access to OVHcloud innovations. These advantages help s...
31.10.2025 12:46 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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Ali Shaikh -Graphiant - Ali Shaikh has been appointed as the new CEO of Graphiant, a company that offers safe multi-cloud and AI networking services. Shaikh takes over for founder Khalid Raza, who will continue to serve on the board of directors and serve as president and ...
31.10.2025 00:26 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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Nokia, Zayo Partner to Build Next-Gen High-Speed Global IP Network Nokia has announced a collaboration with Zayo to deploy a next-generation IP network architecture designed to significantly enhance Zayo’s connectivity capabilities. The initiative aims to deliver faster, more reliable, and more scalable Internet services while expanding Zayo’s ability to support advanced applications such as cloud access, edge computing, and secure high-speed data center interconnections. The partnership would represent a major step in Zayo’s ongoing effort to modernize and expand its global IP backbone, which already spans over 19 million fiber miles and 147,000 route miles. The company’s network connects 400 markets and more than 1,500 on-net data centers worldwide. By leveraging Nokia’s high-performance IP router solutions, Zayo is transitioning to a more modular and scalable architecture that can accommodate surging bandwidth demands and new digital service requirements emerging across industries. The first phase of deployment is already underway in New York and New Jersey, with additional rollouts planned across dozens of markets in the near future. Once fully operational, the project will extend to thousands of new lit buildings, substantially increasing Zayo’s network reach. According to the companies, this transformation will enable Zayo to provision connectivity in new markets at unprecedented speed, reduce exposure to single points of failure, and ensure more resilient performance across its infrastructure. Zayo’s updated IP architecture will be built on Nokia’s FP5-based 7750 Service Router and the 7250 Interconnect Router (IXR). These platforms are designed to support high-capacity transport with energy efficiency and security features optimized for large-scale data and cloud applications. The technology also positions Zayo to deliver 400G and 800G-capable services, meeting growing customer demand for high-performance, low-latency connections that power AI workloads, content delivery, and enterprise cloud migration. Aaron Werley, Senior Vice President of Engineering at Zayo, said the project sets a new benchmark for what fiber-based connectivity can deliver. “By partnering with Nokia, we’re setting a new standard for what’s possible in fiber-based connectivity. The ability to rapidly light up new buildings and markets on our IP network allows us to more quickly respond to customer demand, which is increasingly important in today’s fast-evolving market,” said Mr. Werley. “Nokia’s solution delivers the reliability, performance, and agility we need to meet the growing needs of our customers - from cloud providers and data centers to schools and enterprises.” From Nokia’s perspective, the collaboration underscores the company’s expanding role in modernizing large-scale carrier networks. “This collaboration with Zayo reflects a shared commitment to advancing connectivity and creating new opportunities for digital transformation across industries,” said Jeff Valley, Vice President of IP Networks for CSPs at Nokia. “With our FP5-based platforms and deep expertise in IP networks, we’re enabling Zayo to deploy services faster, simplify operations, and lead the market with flexible, future-ready infrastructure.” By combining Zayo’s extensive global fiber footprint with Nokia’s advanced IP technology, the two companies aim to set a new performance standard for Internet infrastructure - one that will help accelerate the next phase of digital transformation across the cloud, edge, and enterprise sectors.
30.10.2025 21:58 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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OpenAI, Oracle Plan Multi-Billion-Dollar AI Data Center in Michigan OpenAI, Oracle, and Related Digital have announced plans to build one of the largest new data center campuses in the United States - a more than one-gigawatt facility in Saline Township, Michigan. The multi-billion-dollar project marks a significant expansion of the partnership between OpenAI and Oracle, which previously unveiled ambitions to add 4.5 gigawatts of total capacity under their Stargate initiative. Construction on the Michigan data center site is slated to begin in early 2026, pending regulatory approval. For the three companies involved, the development represents both a technological and strategic milestone. OpenAI and Oracle continue to accelerate the build-out of large-scale AI infrastructure capable of supporting the next generation of generative models, while Related Digital - a vertically integrated data center developer and investment platform - positions itself as a key enabler of hyperscale growth. The Michigan project is intended to anchor Oracle’s growing AI-ready cloud capacity in North America and further the broader national effort to localize AI compute infrastructure. “This historic, multi-billion-dollar investment will ensure that Michigan plays a leading role in developing the digital infrastructure American companies need,” said Jeff T. Blau, CEO of Related Companies and chairman of Related Digital. “We are proud to be developing this critical project exclusively for Oracle and contributing to keeping our nation competitive in the global AI race.” OpenAI described the initiative as part of a deliberate effort to expand AI infrastructure beyond traditional coastal hubs and into regions with strong industrial and energy capabilities. “By expanding Stargate to Michigan, we can strengthen domestic supply chains, create good jobs, and help more communities share in the economic opportunities AI is creating,” said Peter Hoeschele, OpenAI’s Vice President of Industrial Compute. For Oracle, which is aggressively scaling its cloud infrastructure footprint to meet surging AI demand, the Michigan campus is another step toward building geographically distributed capacity. “Historically, Michigan has been at the forefront of innovation and industry in America, and this strong legacy will continue as we work with Related Digital to rapidly expand our cloud capacity,” said Mahesh Thiagarajan, executive vice president at Oracle Cloud Infrastructure. Energy Strategy, Water Efficiency The Saline Township project is being financed through a consortium of private investors and financial institutions. During construction, it is expected to generate more than 2,500 union jobs, with an estimated 450 permanent on-site positions once operational. Related Digital and Oracle anticipate another 1,500 county-wide jobs tied directly to the facility’s operation, along with several thousand indirect roles supporting regional supply chains. The new campus will occupy roughly 250 acres and feature three single-story buildings, each about 550,000 square feet in size. Designed under the working name The Barn - a nod to a preserved red barn that will remain near the Michigan Avenue entrance - the development will pursue LEED certification and include minimum 75-foot setbacks with extensive landscaping and screening. Energy strategy has been a key component of the project’s planning. DTE Energy will supply 100 percent of the site’s power using existing generation assets supplemented by new battery storage built and financed as part of the development. According to DTE, this arrangement will ensure there is no negative impact on existing customers’ energy supply or rates, while the project’s contribution to grid maintenance will help stabilize long-term costs. Water efficiency is also central to the design. The facility will use a closed-loop cooling system, limiting daily water consumption to levels comparable to those of a large office building - an increasingly critical factor in hyperscale site design as data centers expand into regions managing finite water resources. Walbridge, a century-old Detroit-based construction firm, will serve as the project’s general contractor. Brent Behrman, CEO of Related Digital, emphasized his company’s experience delivering large-scale data centers for hyperscalers on time and on budget, adding that the team expects to break ground in early 2026, pending approval from the Michigan Public Service Commission.
30.10.2025 21:58 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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NVIDIA Becomes First Company to Hit $5 Trillion Market Valuation NVIDIA has officially become the world’s first company to reach a $5 trillion market capitalization, marking a historic milestone in both technology and financial markets. The company’s stock surged nearly 4% on Wednesday, continuing a rally fueled by record demand for its artificial intelligence (AI) chips and sweeping announcements made during its GTC event in Washington, D.C. The achievement cements NVIDIA’s transformation from a niche graphics card maker into the dominant force driving the global AI revolution. Over the past five years, the company has reshaped computing by developing chips that power everything from generative AI models and robotics to autonomous vehicles and data centers. Its success has not only redefined semiconductor economics but has also elevated AI infrastructure to a central role in geopolitics and industrial strategy. Wednesday’s rise came after U.S. President Donald Trump referenced an upcoming meeting with NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang, sparking optimism over the company’s ability to expand business in China despite export restrictions. According to Bloomberg, Trump said the two would “be speaking about Blackwells,” referring to NVIDIA’s latest generation of AI processors. Industry observers interpreted the remark as a possible signal that limited versions of the chips could receive regulatory approval for sale to Chinese clients. The company’s valuation milestone follows a string of announcements that have kept NVIDIA at the center of technological innovation. During GTC, Huang revealed that NVIDIA expects $500 billion in GPU orders for AI workloads and plans to build seven new AI supercomputers in collaboration with the U.S. Department of Energy. One of these systems will feature more than 10,000 of NVIDIA’s new Blackwell GPUs - processors designed to handle the immense computational demands of generative AI and scientific research. Bridging Quantum and Classical Computing NVIDIA also announced a $1 billion strategic investment in Nokia to help develop next-generation 6G communications infrastructure, expanding its role beyond computing hardware into the backbone of global connectivity. The move ties into a broader set of partnerships unveiled during GTC, including collaborations with Cisco, T-Mobile, Palantir, and Oracle to accelerate wireless and enterprise AI initiatives. Other agreements announced include supplying 1,000 GPUs to pharmaceutical giant Eli Lilly to power AI-driven drug discovery, as well as working with Uber to develop a fleet of autonomous vehicles. NVIDIA’s technology will also underpin robotics and automation projects for manufacturers such as Foxconn, Caterpillar, and Belden, along with major cloud integrations for Amazon Web Services. The company’s new NVQLink architecture - introduced at GTC - aims to bridge quantum and classical computing, enabling faster data exchange between GPUs and quantum processors. NVIDIA said the open platform is being developed with quantum computing firms including Rigetti and IonQ, as well as several U.S. Department of Energy laboratories. AI Factories Despite its dominance, NVIDIA continues to navigate complex geopolitical dynamics. Its most recent quarterly report, released in late August, showed no sales of its H20 AI processors to China amid ongoing U.S. export restrictions. The White House previously indicated it had reached a tentative agreement allowing NVIDIA to ship certain chips to China in exchange for a 15% revenue share, though the company said the deal has yet to be finalized. For investors, NVIDIA’s momentum has been staggering. Shares have climbed more than 50% since the beginning of the year, adding hundreds of billions of dollars in market value. The rally accelerated this week following the GTC announcements and growing confidence that the AI sector’s growth trajectory remains robust. NVIDIA’s ascent to the $5 trillion mark underscores a seismic shift in the global tech landscape. As AI moves from experimentation to large-scale deployment, the company’s GPUs have become the essential infrastructure of digital intelligence - powering the world’s most advanced models, from ChatGPT to autonomous systems. CEO Jensen Huang has described this moment as the dawn of “AI factories” - data centers designed not to store information, but to generate intelligence. “The age of AI has begun,” Huang told attendees at GTC. “Every company will become an intelligence manufacturer, and our technology is the engine behind it.” With its market capitalization now rivaling the GDP of major economies, NVIDIA’s influence extends far beyond Silicon Valley. Its chips are shaping the pace of innovation across industries, governments, and research institutions. And with its latest breakthroughs in computing, networking, and quantum integration, NVIDIA appears intent on ensuring the AI revolution continues to run on its silicon.
30.10.2025 21:27 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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AtlasEdge Secures €253M Green Financing to Expand Lisbon Data Campus AtlasEdge, one of Europe’s fastest-growing data center operators, has secured €253 million in green financing to accelerate the expansion of its flagship Lisbon campus - a key development in the company’s broader plan to deliver sustainable, high-capacity digital infrastructure across the continent. The financing, structured as a seven-year senior secured Term Bond facility, is divided into two tranches: €63 million to complete the first phase (LIS001) and €190 million to fund construction of the second phase (LIS002). Banco Santander and ING acted as joint bookrunners for the deal, with ING also serving as the sole Sustainability Coordinator. The funding marks one of the largest sustainability-linked data center financing arrangements in Southern Europe, aligning with AtlasEdge’s commitment to operate on 100% renewable energy. Portugal’s strong renewable energy mix - being the world’s fourth-largest producer of solar and wind power - makes Lisbon a natural location for AtlasEdge’s latest expansion. The new campus will deliver a total of 30MW of IT capacity over three phases. LIS001 already has its capacity pre-contracted by top-tier cloud and digital infrastructure customers, with services expected to go live by late 2025. The second phase, LIS002, is in master planning, with readiness for service expected in 2028. Carcavelos Subsea Cable In a parallel move, AtlasEdge has acquired an additional 10,000 square meters of land adjacent to the site for LIS003, bringing the total future capacity of the Lisbon campus to 30MW. The expansion reinforces the company’s ambition to deploy more than 150MW of new capacity across Europe in the coming years. Strategically located less than 10 kilometers from the Carcavelos submarine cable landing station, the Lisbon campus will serve as a vital low-latency hub connecting Europe with Africa, the Middle East, and the Americas. The project further strengthens Portugal’s position as a digital gateway for hyperscalers, enterprises, and content delivery providers expanding their European footprints. “Today’s launch, the addition of LIS002 and LIS003, and this green financing demonstrate the momentum we’re building across the Iberian Peninsula – a region with significant opportunity to scale,” said AtlasEdge CEO Tesh Durvasula. “This is a sustainable, strategically located campus and a game-changer for customers operating in the Portuguese market.” Jonathan Hoo, CFO of AtlasEdge, emphasized the flexibility the financing provides. “This financing, together with the LIS003 acquisition, gives us the ability to execute our Lisbon growth plan with clear focus and control. It aligns our expansion with sustainability targets while delivering capacity where our customers need it,” he said. Financial partners underscored the project’s importance in shaping sustainable digital infrastructure across Europe. “ING’s appetite for the data center sector is stronger than ever, and we are proud to support AtlasEdge’s impressive expansion plans,” said Sicco Boomsma, Managing Director for EMEA at ING. “This innovative green financing provides the flexibility to scale the Lisbon campus, building on the successful launch of LIS001. Robert Drew, Managing Director and Head of TMT Global Banking for the UK at Banco Santander, added: “We are proud to be powering AtlasEdge’s growth in the Iberian Peninsula. This transaction underlines our commitment to digital infrastructure and sustainable development in Portugal, strengthening Lisbon’s role as a regional connectivity hub.” The investment underscores AtlasEdge’s growing role in Europe’s digital transformation strategy. The company, a joint venture between Liberty Global and DigitalBridge, is rapidly expanding its network of edge data centers across key European markets, focusing on energy efficiency and proximity to end users. Portugal is expected to become one of AtlasEdge’s core growth regions, with over €500 million in planned investments over the next few years. With the Lisbon project, the company is aligning sustainability, connectivity, and scalability - delivering infrastructure designed for the AI era while maintaining environmental responsibility.
30.10.2025 21:15 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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Lumen Expands Internet On-Demand to 10M U.S. Business Locations Lumen Technologies has announced one of its largest infrastructure expansions to date, bringing its Internet On-Demand service to more than 10 million additional business locations across the United States. The move marks a significant milestone in the company’s ongoing push to simplify connectivity for enterprises navigating digital transformation, hybrid cloud adoption, and AI-driven workloads. The announcement effectively extends Lumen’s Network-as-a-Service (NaaS) platform far beyond its existing footprint, allowing organizations to provision high-performance, scalable internet access in minutes - regardless of whether their sites fall within Lumen’s owned network. By partnering with other carriers for last-mile delivery, Lumen is offering a self-service platform that gives enterprises greater reach and agility without the complexity of negotiating multiple network contracts. “Customers tell us their biggest challenge is reach - getting reliable, on-demand connectivity wherever their business operates,” said Dave Ward, Chief Technology and Product Officer at Lumen Technologies. “For too long, businesses have been constrained by geography, but we’re eliminating that barrier. By extending our Internet On-Demand service beyond our network, we’re giving them the flexibility they need to compete.” Cloud-Like Connectivity Performance “By combining QTS’s scale and innovation with Lumen’s AI-ready infrastructure, we’re creating the digital backbone for the AI economy,” said Ashley Haynes-Gaspar, Chief Revenue Officer at Lumen.The Internet On-Demand platform delivers cloud-like performance for enterprise connectivity. Businesses can dynamically adjust bandwidth, choose from different routing options, and scale usage up or down in real time - all through a digital portal. Customers pay only for what they use, by the hour if desired, with additional options for enhanced security through Lumen Defender. The service aims to replicate the experience of cloud resource provisioning, giving IT teams the ability to deploy or expand connectivity as quickly as spinning up a virtual machine. The broader availability of the service is expected to benefit sectors that depend heavily on distributed, data-intensive operations. Retailers can ensure consistent digital experiences across hundreds of stores; financial institutions can enable secure branch connectivity; healthcare organizations can support telemedicine and real-time collaboration; and manufacturers can link production sites and warehouses into unified, adaptive networks. Among early adopters is Xcel Energy, a major U.S. utility company modernizing its grid and digital infrastructure across multiple states. Xcel is leveraging Lumen’s Internet On-Demand service to streamline off-network connectivity and accelerate deployment of grid analytics and monitoring systems. “As we modernize our grid and expand digital operations, our collaboration with Lumen is enabling the digital foundation for the future of energy,” said Tim Peterson, Chief Technology Officer at Xcel Energy. “The agility and reliability of on-demand connectivity allow faster site turn-ups, real-time monitoring, and scalable infrastructure for more resilient operations.” To deliver these capabilities, Lumen has also strengthened its ecosystem of partners, including Carrier Access, which supports enterprise connectivity for off-network sites. Together, the partners are addressing one of the most persistent pain points in enterprise IT: the fragmented nature of network service procurement and deployment. The company’s latest expansion builds on its existing suite of on-demand connectivity solutions, which includes Ethernet On-Demand for rapid, software-defined provisioning of private connections. Lumen plans to further enhance the platform with a next-generation multi-service interface device featuring AI-driven monitoring and automated troubleshooting - extending intelligent automation to network operations. QTS Data Centers The announcement coincides with a deeper partnership between Lumen and QTS Data Centers, a major global operator of hyperscale and enterprise data facilities. The companies revealed plans to integrate Lumen’s AI-ready infrastructure with 16 new QTS campuses across the United States, including sites in Texas, Arizona, Virginia, Georgia, Ohio, and Oregon. QTS will also leverage Lumen’s Wavelength services and Network-as-a-Service offerings to support customers building advanced AI and cloud environments. “QTS is excited to continue our strategic partnership with Lumen, our premier partner for Network-as-a-Service and software-defined networking technologies,” said Brent Bensten, Chief Technology Officer at QTS. “In an industry where innovation and scalability are essential, Lumen brings the technical expertise and expansive fiber network to help us meet growing demand. Together, we’re shaping the future of digital infrastructure.” Lumen will play multiple roles in the QTS ecosystem: as a fiber provider building diverse, high-capacity routes between campuses; as the NaaS and SDN provider powering QTS’s Switchboard fabric; as an intelligent network fabric integrator extending connectivity to public clouds and AI on-ramps; and as the backbone provider deploying a wavelength network for redundancy and site management. “This partnership exemplifies our connected ecosystem strategy,” said Ashley Haynes-Gaspar, Chief Revenue Officer at Lumen. “By combining QTS’s scale and innovation with Lumen’s AI-ready infrastructure, we’re creating the digital backbone for the AI economy. Hyperscalers need fast training, smart scaling, and secure connectivity - this delivers all three.” As AI and data-intensive workloads redefine how networks are designed, Lumen’s moves signal a broader shift in enterprise connectivity. Traditional models of static network provisioning are giving way to programmable, software-defined, and consumption-based services. By extending its Internet On-Demand reach and partnering with data center providers like QTS, Lumen is positioning itself as both a service provider and an enabler of next-generation digital ecosystems. For U.S. enterprises, the implications are significant: faster time to value, simpler network management, and access to a scalable infrastructure that adapts to the pace of digital transformation. For Lumen, it reinforces a broader strategic message—the network itself is no longer a static utility, but a flexible platform for innovation.
30.10.2025 20:05 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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LifeinCloud brings its VPS brand LumaDock to the US with a New York AZ LifeinCloud has introduced its first US-based availability zone for the LumaDock VPS platform, marking a major step in transatlantic expansion. The new zone in New York connects directly to key internet exchanges, offering low-latency access to user...
30.10.2025 19:34 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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DartPoints Joins Nutanix Program to Expand Private Cloud Services DartPoints, a U.S.-based provider of colocation, cloud, and interconnection services, has joined the Nutanix Elevate Service Provider Program, marking a strategic move to enhance its enterprise cloud offerings and solidify its role as a key regional infrastructure player. The partnership positions DartPoints to deliver fully managed, single-tenant private cloud environments built on Nutanix’s hyperconverged infrastructure (HCI) - a platform widely adopted for its ability to unify compute, storage, and networking into a scalable, software-defined architecture. For DartPoints, the Nutanix designation is more than a badge of technical credibility - it signals a deeper alignment with enterprise customers seeking secure, compliant, and high-performance private cloud solutions as part of their hybrid or multi-cloud strategies. The company operates a network of strategically located data centers across the southern and central United States, enabling low-latency access and geographic redundancy for customers with mission-critical workloads. Under the partnership, DartPoints will integrate Nutanix Prism Central for unified cloud management, offering visibility and control across multiple clusters from a single console. The inclusion of Nutanix Flow adds microsegmentation and advanced network security capabilities - features increasingly essential for industries under strict regulatory oversight. These combined technologies allow DartPoints to meet a range of compliance standards, including HIPAA, SOC 1/2/3, PCI-DSS, HITECH, and CSA, making the solution particularly attractive to customers in healthcare, financial services, and government sectors. According to Christian Goffi, Vice President of North American Channel Sales at Nutanix, DartPoints’ participation reflects both technical maturity and market readiness. “DartPoints stands out as a provider that not only delivers robust private cloud solutions but also owns the infrastructure that can help enhance reliability,” said Mr. Goffi. “Their commitment to expanding their cloud portfolio and introducing innovative consumption models aligns perfectly with the vision of the Nutanix Elevate Partner Program.” Multi-Tenant Private Cloud, HPC The collaboration would offer enterprises several advantages: dedicated and fully managed environments supported by DartPoints’ engineering teams, on-demand scalability for variable workloads, and simplified workload migration powered by Nutanix’s orchestration tools. Customers can also benefit from geographic diversity and high availability through DartPoints’ interconnected facilities, ensuring operational continuity even under demanding conditions. Looking ahead, DartPoints plans to extend its Nutanix-powered services by 2026, adding multi-tenant private cloud, high-performance computing, and infrastructure tailored for private generative AI workloads and container orchestration. The roadmap underscores the company’s ambition to cater to next-generation enterprise computing demands, balancing control, security, and flexibility without relying solely on hyperscale public cloud providers. “Our partnership with Nutanix enables us to deliver scalable, secure, and fully managed private cloud environments built for today’s most demanding enterprise use cases - from compliance-heavy industries to AI-driven innovation,” said Brad Alexander, Chief Technology Officer at DartPoints. “We’re redefining what modern infrastructure looks like for organizations that need control, performance, and flexibility beyond what hyperscalers can offer.”
30.10.2025 17:28 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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Equinix Invests £3.9B in Major UK Data Center Expansion Equinix has announced the completion of its acquisition of an 85-acre site in Hertfordshire, United Kingdom, marking the beginning of one of the largest data center investments ever made in the country. The global digital infrastructure company plans to invest £3.9 billion in developing a hyperscale campus that will deliver more than 250 megawatts of compute capacity. This would position the Equinix site as a core component of the UK’s critical national infrastructure and a major step toward its ambition to lead in sovereign artificial intelligence. The Hertfordshire project, previously referred to as Equinix DC01UK, is set to play a central role in enabling Britain’s digital transformation. Once fully operational, it will serve a broad spectrum of industries - including healthcare, life sciences, public services, financial institutions, manufacturing, and entertainment - providing the secure, scalable connectivity needed for AI, cloud, and data-intensive applications. For Equinix, this development represents its largest European investment to date and signals long-term confidence in the UK’s position as a global technology hub. The economic impact is expected to be significant. KPMG estimates the construction of the Hertfordshire campus will directly generate 2,500 local jobs, with more than 200 permanent positions once the facility becomes fully operational. Most of these will be high-skilled roles supporting the technical and operational demands of large-scale data infrastructure. During the construction phase, the Equinix project could inject as much as £3 billion in annual Gross Value Added (GVA) into the UK economy, driven by employment, supply chain activity, and regional investment. Once operational, the campus is expected to contribute around £260 million in annual GVA. Equinix also plans to integrate strong community engagement into its development strategy, including partnerships with local residents, educational institutions, and businesses to support workforce training, biodiversity restoration, and STEM education programs. The company has acquired an additional 10,000-square-metre plot adjacent to the campus for a third data center, expanding total capacity to 30MW across three phases. The first facility, LIS001, is already under development, with service expected to go live by the end of 2025. The second, LIS002, is in the master planning stage and scheduled for completion in 2028. AI Ambitions, Data Center Sustainability Equinix Managing Director for the UK, James Tyler, described the investment as both a technological and social commitment: “The UK is a cornerstone of the global economy and is a natural home for our most substantial investment in Europe to date. This development brings a significant amount of data center capacity to Britain, contributing to the government’s AI growth ambition. But this investment goes far beyond building the infrastructure needed to unlock the UK’s digital potential. It’s the evolution of an ongoing partnership with the local and national community.” The UK government has welcomed the move as a major boost to its digital economy. “This £3.9 billion investment is a huge win for Britain,” said Liz Kendall, Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and Technology. “It will give businesses – from life sciences to high street banks – the ability to connect to thousands of other businesses across the world in an instant, powering our AI ambitions, boosting growth, and creating hundreds of well-paid jobs.” Sustainability remains a cornerstone of Equinix’s plans. All of its European facilities, including those in the UK, already operate on 100% renewable energy, with a global goal to achieve full renewable coverage by 2030. The Hertfordshire campus will feature advanced dry cooling systems to minimize water use - comparable to that of conventional office buildings - and retain more than half of the site as open space. Equinix has also pledged to achieve at least a 10% biodiversity net gain by creating new ecological habitats across the property. Industry leaders see the project as a defining example of the UK’s growing digital maturity. Luisa Cardani, Head of Data Centres at techUK, commented, “This announcement reflects the scale of opportunity the UK has to strengthen its digital foundations. Data centers are the backbone of our economy – they enable innovation, productivity, and growth across every sector. Continued investment in sustainable, resilient digital infrastructure will be critical to delivering on the UK’s ambitions for AI and long-term economic prosperity.” The new campus builds on Equinix’s established presence in the UK, where it already operates 14 data centers serving over 1,300 local customers and 10,000 worldwide. The company employs more than 1,200 people across the country, contributing an estimated £145 million directly to UK household income. As part of its wider sustainability and innovation agenda, all Equinix sites are designed to enable future heat export, allowing excess energy from data center operations to be reused for community or industrial purposes.
30.10.2025 17:28 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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INTROSERV Strengthens Its Advanced Partnership with OVHcloud The Advanced Partner tier grants INTROSERV access to an extended suite of partner benefits – from financial incentives and co-marketing opportunities to exclusive technical support and early access to OVHcloud innovations. These advantages help s...
30.10.2025 12:45 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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NVIDIA Invests $1B in Nokia to Build AI-Powered 6G Networks NVIDIA is expanding its ambitions beyond the realm of artificial intelligence and high-performance computing into the very networks that carry global data traffic. During his keynote at the company’s GPU Technology Conference (GTC) in Washington, D.C., CEO Jensen Huang announced that NVIDIA will invest $1 billion in Nokia, acquiring roughly 166 million new shares at $6.01 each - a 2.9% stake in the Finnish telecom company. The partnership marks a strategic shift for NVIDIA, signaling its intent to shape the infrastructure layer of next-generation wireless computing. Huang, known for his sweeping technological visions, framed telecommunications as the “digital nervous system” of the modern economy - a critical foundation that, in his view, has been dominated by non-U.S. vendors for too long. With the deal, NVIDIA aims to bring part of that technological leadership back under American influence, pairing its AI and accelerated computing platforms with Nokia’s deep expertise in network hardware. The collaboration will focus on creating AI-driven radio access networks (RAN) that can dynamically manage the massive data volumes generated by emerging applications in automation, robotics, and real-time analytics. Nokia, meanwhile, will use the capital infusion to fund AI development and ongoing operations. For Nokia, the partnership comes at a pivotal moment. Once synonymous with indestructible mobile phones, the company now designs and supplies much of the equipment behind global 5G infrastructure. Under its new CEO, Justin Hotard, a former Intel executive, Nokia has sharpened its focus on the convergence of AI and telecommunications. Hotard has described the shift from 5G to 6G as more than an incremental improvement - it’s a “fundamental redesign” that will push intelligence closer to users, moving computation from centralized data centers to the network edge. NVIDIA’s Modular Edge System Central to this new vision is NVIDIA’s Aerial RAN Computer Pro (ARC-Pro) - a modular edge system that merges connectivity, compute power, and sensor control into a single unit. Designed for low-latency environments such as autonomous drones, smart factories, and streaming applications, ARC-Pro runs on NVIDIA’s CUDA platform, enabling software-defined upgrades rather than full hardware replacements. Nokia’s AirScale radio platform will integrate this technology, allowing telecom operators to upgrade base stations through software updates - a potential cost-saving breakthrough for carriers facing the expensive transition to 6G. The alliance also extends to Dell Technologies, which will supply its PowerEdge servers to turn these edge deployments into reliable micro-data centers optimized for AI workloads. The combined effort illustrates a new chapter in the evolution of network infrastructure - one in which traditional telecoms, chipmakers, and enterprise hardware vendors converge to create intelligent, self-optimizing networks. For NVIDIA, the Nokia partnership is both a business expansion and a geopolitical statement. It positions the company at the heart of how digital intelligence moves through the world - from data center to device, and increasingly, across the airwaves.
30.10.2025 07:30 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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DNS Firewall Market to Triple by 2032 Amid Rising Cyber Threats The global Domain Name System (DNS) Firewall market is entering a new phase of expansion, driven by surging cybersecurity threats, rapid cloud adoption, and the evolution of hybrid networks. According to a new study by Credence Research, the DNS firewall sector is expected to grow from USD 1.8 billion in 2024 to USD 5.51 billion by 2032, representing a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 15%. Once viewed as a secondary layer in network defense, DNS firewalls have now become a frontline security component, safeguarding enterprises from phishing, ransomware, data exfiltration, and command-and-control attacks. As organizations deepen their reliance on cloud platforms and distributed IT infrastructures, DNS firewalls are emerging as a foundational layer in Zero Trust security frameworks - providing visibility, segmentation, and automated protection at the domain level. Industry analysts point out that the global rise in DNS-targeted attacks is a major factor behind this rapid adoption. In 2025, for example, cybersecurity agencies reported a significant increase in DNS tunneling and amplification attacks, particularly targeting cloud-hosted applications and enterprise SaaS platforms. Attackers increasingly exploit DNS as a covert communication channel for data theft or botnet orchestration. In response, large enterprises across banking, telecom, and healthcare sectors are accelerating the deployment of AI-driven DNS filtering systems to block malicious domains before they connect. Leading vendors are also expanding their DNS security portfolios. Akamai Technologies, for instance, recently integrated zero trust DNS protection modules into its enterprise suite, while Cisco Systems enhanced its Umbrella platform with machine learning capabilities for real-time anomaly detection. These innovations reflect a broader industry movement toward autonomous, predictive cybersecurity architectures, where DNS protection serves as both a detection and prevention mechanism. At the same time, cloud transformation and remote work models have reshaped network security requirements. Organizations that operate across multiple cloud providers now rely on DNS firewalls for consistent policy enforcement and secure routing between SaaS environments such as AWS, Microsoft 365, and Salesforce. Vendors like Infoblox have responded by enhancing cloud-managed platforms such as BloxOne Threat Defense, optimized for distributed corporate networks. As corporate boundaries dissolve, DNS firewalls provide essential control over user access and endpoint visibility, enabling teams to maintain compliance and performance across geographies. DNS Configurations Regulatory pressure is another accelerating factor. Frameworks such as the EU NIS2 Directive, NIST’s Zero Trust Architecture, and data sovereignty laws in emerging regions increasingly mandate proactive domain-level filtering. Financial institutions in Europe, for instance, are integrating DNS firewall reporting into network audit systems to support compliance and forensic analysis. These policies not only elevate DNS-layer security from optional to essential but also reinforce the role of DNS firewalls as a compliance enabler in digital transformation initiatives. Despite strong growth drivers, the market faces several structural challenges. Implementation and maintenance costs remain a major hurdle - especially for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). High licensing fees, integration complexities, and the ongoing need for threat intelligence updates limit the technology’s reach in cost-sensitive regions. Moreover, many organizations still underestimate the importance of DNS-layer protection, prioritizing endpoint and perimeter security instead. The lack of skilled professionals capable of managing DNS firewalls within multi-cloud architectures further slows adoption. Legacy integration poses another obstacle. Many public sector entities and educational institutions still operate on outdated DNS configurations that struggle to interface with modern security features. These compatibility issues often result in delayed deployments or performance bottlenecks. Upgrading legacy networks to support real-time DNS interception and analysis remains a costly but necessary step toward holistic cyber resilience. In parallel, several market trends are reshaping the industry’s trajectory. One is the integration of DNS firewalls into Zero Trust frameworks. Companies such as Palo Alto Networks have embedded DNS traffic controls into their Prisma Access platform to strengthen micro-segmentation and limit lateral movement inside corporate networks. This alignment ensures that every connection request - whether internal or external - is verified at the DNS layer, reducing attack surfaces and reinforcing identity-driven access policies. AI/ML - Hybrid Cloud Another key development is the use of artificial intelligence and machine learning to enhance threat detection. Modern DNS firewalls increasingly rely on AI models to analyze billions of queries in real time, identifying suspicious domains and traffic anomalies faster than human analysts can. Both Akamai and F5 Networks have implemented machine learning algorithms to automatically recognize new threat patterns, shifting DNS protection toward proactive and autonomous defense models. The rise of cloud-native and hybrid deployments is also transforming how organizations implement DNS security. Rather than relying solely on on-premises infrastructure, companies are embracing flexible, cloud-managed solutions that integrate with existing DevOps and orchestration tools. BlueCat Networks, for example, developed Adaptive DNS, a hybrid platform compatible with Google Cloud and AWS environments, giving enterprises a single control plane for multi-cloud DNS security. This flexibility is particularly appealing for organizations managing multiple data centers or regional offices that require scalable, policy-driven DNS protection. Looking ahead, emerging markets present vast opportunities for DNS firewall vendors. Rapid digitization across the Middle East, Southeast Asia, and Latin America is driving demand for national threat intelligence frameworks and stronger enterprise defenses. Programs such as India’s Digital Security Mission are pushing sectors like banking and telecommunications to adopt DNS-level controls. As these economies build out their cloud ecosystems, suppliers offering affordable, localized, and compliance-ready DNS firewalls stand to gain significant market share. Additionally, the global boom in 5G networks and IoT devices is set to amplify demand for real-time DNS security. Billions of connected devices generate continuous streams of DNS traffic—often without native protection. Telecom operators in countries like Japan and South Korea have already started embedding DNS firewall modules directly into their 5G core networks to safeguard device communications and minimize latency. As IoT adoption scales, DNS firewalls capable of handling massive query volumes and edge-level traffic filtering will become indispensable. A parallel growth avenue lies in Managed Security Services (MSSPs), which are now bundling DNS protection into broader cybersecurity packages for SMBs, says Credence Research. Providers such as GoDaddy and Cloudflare have introduced DNS firewall services tailored to smaller enterprises that lack in-house expertise. By offering DNS security as a managed or subscription-based service, MSSPs lower adoption barriers and create new recurring revenue streams while helping businesses meet compliance and resilience standards. Overall, the DNS firewall market’s rapid evolution mirrors the broader transformation of enterprise security - from static defenses to adaptive, cloud-integrated ecosystems. As cyber threats grow more sophisticated and data volumes continue to surge, DNS-layer protection is no longer a niche technology - it is a critical enabler of trustworthy digital infrastructure. With cloud-native scalability, AI-driven automation, and regulatory momentum converging, DNS firewalls are poised to become an indispensable element of enterprise cybersecurity architecture through the next decade.
30.10.2025 07:30 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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Crusoe Deploys NVIDIA BlueField-4 to Power Next-Gen AI Systems With a notable boost in processing capability over its predecessor, BlueField-4 is an enhanced infrastructure platform made for intricate multi-service architectures. By offering robust, zero-trust isolation between virtual instances, it serves as th...
30.10.2025 00:43 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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Ali Shaikh -Graphiant - Ali Shaikh has been appointed as the new CEO of Graphiant, a company that offers safe multi-cloud and AI networking services. Shaikh takes over for founder Khalid Raza, who will continue to serve on the board of directors and serve as president and ...
30.10.2025 00:25 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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Jensen Huang Unveils NVIDIA’s Vision for the Next Era of AI In Washington, D.C., NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang took the stage at GTC to deliver what felt less like a product announcement and more like a sweeping manifesto for the future of computing. Addressing a packed auditorium, Huang reflected on America’s tec...
29.10.2025 21:53 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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VOLT Launches Global AI Factory Projects and Expands Tech Recruitment Dutch entrepreneur Han de Groot has officially launched VOLT, a new company that aims to design, build, and operate large-scale AI Factories - specialized data centers purpose-built for artificial intelligence infrastructure. The announcement marks the company’s emergence from stealth mode, positioning VOLT as one of the first European developers focused exclusively on next-generation AI compute facilities. De Groot, known in the tech industry for his earlier ventures in digital infrastructure, said his fascination with data centers began in 2019 while developing one in Amsterdam. That experience, he explained, revealed how essential such facilities have become to the rapid evolution of artificial intelligence. According to him, AI data centers are no longer merely “powered boxes” for digital storage, but “factories of intelligence” - high-performance environments where chips, cloud systems, and neural networks generate the computational output that drives innovation, automation, and economic growth. The company’s founding comes at a time when global demand for AI infrastructure capacity is surging, driven by the growth of generative AI, large language models, and high-performance computing workloads. De Groot argues that nations and enterprises must secure “digital sovereignty” by developing their own AI infrastructure - in much the same way that energy and water supply are considered essential public assets. Netherlands, Dubai, USA VOLT’s first projects are already in motion. The company is developing AI Factory sites in Rotterdam, the Middle East (Dubai), and the United States (Dallas), with plans for further expansion across Europe. These facilities will focus on AI model training, inference, and cloud services, leveraging the Netherlands’ well-established position as a hub for digital connectivity and renewable energy integration. To support this rapid international rollout, VOLT is expanding its team across multiple technical and strategic disciplines. The company is hiring for several senior and specialized positions, including: * Chief Technology Officer (CTO): A visionary leader to co-create the AI Infrastructure and Supercomputing Platform - designing modular AI centers that integrate grid-to-chip systems and software-defined sites capable of self-optimization. * Chief Data Center Architect: Responsible for developing VOLT’s global reference architecture, leading the design of scalable, sustainable AI-ready campuses with expertise in high-voltage power systems, liquid cooling, and lifecycle carbon reduction. * Head of European Site Selection & Acquisition: Tasked with securing powered land, grid capacity, and permits across EU markets to deliver large-scale AI and hyperscale campuses on accelerated timelines. * High-Performance Computing Expert: Focused on optimizing GPU-based AI workloads, CUDA performance, and large-scale model training environments. * Systems Architect: Designing modular, cloud-scale data center architectures for AI and distributed computing environments. * Thermal & Energy Engineer: Developing next-generation cooling and energy systems that maximize efficiency and enable integration with renewables. * Software / Network Engineer: Building the distributed software and network fabric that powers VOLT’s global AI infrastructure. These roles, De Groot said, reflect VOLT’s vision of bringing together “engineering, sustainability, and intelligence” to define the future of digital infrastructure. The company’s mission is to ensure that Europe becomes an AI maker — not an AI taker, creating its own technology ecosystem rather than relying solely on U.S. or Asian hyperscalers.
29.10.2025 21:48 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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NVIDIA Unveils BlueField-4 to Power Next-Gen AI Data Centers NVIDIA has unveiled the BlueField-4 data processing unit (DPU), the latest generation of its BlueField platform, designed to serve as the technological backbone of next-generation AI factories. The company describes BlueField-4 as the data center equivalent of an operating system for artificial intelligence - bringing together advanced acceleration for data storage, networking, and security at previously unattainable scale. The introduction of BlueField-4 represents a major leap in NVIDIA’s ongoing effort to build a fully integrated AI infrastructure stack that spans from chips to complete data center architectures. The new processor supports 800 gigabits per second (Gb/s) of throughput and delivers a sixfold increase in computing performance compared to its predecessor, the BlueField-3. It combines an NVIDIA Grace CPU with ConnectX-9 networking and is engineered to support AI factories that are up to four times larger than previous-generation deployments. The platform plays a central role in NVIDIA’s “gigascale AI” strategy, enabling enterprises, cloud providers, and hyperscalers to manage massive data pipelines with high-performance inference and reduced latency. BlueField-4’s software-defined acceleration extends across AI data storage, security, and networking workloads - turning traditional data centers into adaptive, intelligent systems capable of handling the complex and continuous demands of AI-driven operations. Crucially, BlueField-4 introduces native support for NVIDIA DOCA microservices - containerized functions that automate, protect, and optimize AI infrastructure operations. These microservices allow organizations to streamline AI deployment and provide runtime security, enabling multi-tenant networking and elastic scaling across hybrid and multicloud environments. With DOCA integration, applications built for earlier BlueField versions will run seamlessly on BlueField-4, offering substantial performance gains without the need for redevelopment. Security and trust form another core pillar of the design. BlueField-4 is built on NVIDIA’s Advanced Secure Trusted Resource Architecture, which allows service providers and enterprises to deploy zero-trust, software-defined computing environments. This includes features such as bare-metal instance isolation, real-time threat mitigation, and end-to-end encryption, all critical to maintaining secure AI operations at scale. The platform’s networking layer is powered by NVIDIA ConnectX-9 SuperNICs, delivering 800 Gb/s connectivity optimized for Spectrum-X Ethernet. The result is ultra-low latency and high reliability - essential for distributed training, high-performance computing (HPC), and AI inference workloads where consistent data transfer speeds directly affect performance outcomes. NVIDIA’s Broader AI Infrastructure Portfolio BlueField-4 would integrate seamlessly across NVIDIA’s ecosystem, from RTX PRO Servers and DGX and HGX systems to large-scale configurations like NVIDIA’s Enterprise AI Factory reference designs and DGX SuperPODs. This unified architecture would ensure consistent performance, efficiency, and security across NVIDIA’s broader AI infrastructure portfolio. Industry adoption is already underway. Leading server and storage manufacturers—including Cisco, Dell Technologies, HPE, Lenovo, IBM, Supermicro, DDN, VAST Data, and WEKA - are building next-generation AI storage and compute systems around the BlueField platform. For the cybersecurity sector, companies such as Palo Alto Networks, Check Point, F5, Trend Micro, and Armis are using BlueField to create zero-trust frameworks capable of real-time detection and mitigation of threats in AI-driven environments. Cloud and AI providers like Oracle Cloud Infrastructure, CoreWeave, Crusoe, Lambda, and Together.ai are incorporating DOCA-based microservices to enhance the performance and security of AI workloads running across multi-tenant supercomputing environments. Infrastructure software platforms including Red Hat, SUSE, Canonical, and Nutanix are also aligning their offerings to integrate BlueField-4 for storage, networking, and security orchestration. Systems Integrators, Availability Beyond technology providers, global systems integrators such as Accenture, Deloitte, and World Wide Technology are collaborating with NVIDIA to deliver BlueField-powered AI infrastructure and cybersecurity solutions to enterprise and government clients worldwide. These partnerships underscore the growing demand for scalable, secure AI architectures that can handle massive data workloads without compromising on compliance or operational resilience. According to NVIDIA, BlueField-4 will enter early availability in 2026 as part of the company’s Vera Rubin platform, marking the next step in its roadmap to redefine data center infrastructure for the AI era. By tightly integrating compute, networking, and storage acceleration under one platform, NVIDIA positions BlueField-4 as a cornerstone technology for the AI industrial age, where efficiency, trust, and speed determine competitiveness across industries.
29.10.2025 21:35 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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NVIDIA Becomes First Company to Hit $5 Trillion Market Valuation NVIDIA has officially become the world’s first company to reach a $5 trillion market capitalization, marking a historic milestone in both technology and financial markets. The company’s stock surged nearly 4% on Wednesday, continuing a rally fueled by record demand for its artificial intelligence (AI) chips and sweeping announcements made during its GTC event in Washington, D.C. The achievement cements NVIDIA’s transformation from a niche graphics card maker into the dominant force driving the global AI revolution. Over the past five years, the company has reshaped computing by developing chips that power everything from generative AI models and robotics to autonomous vehicles and data centers. Its success has not only redefined semiconductor economics but has also elevated AI infrastructure to a central role in geopolitics and industrial strategy. Wednesday’s rise came after U.S. President Donald Trump referenced an upcoming meeting with NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang, sparking optimism over the company’s ability to expand business in China despite export restrictions. According to Bloomberg, Trump said the two would “be speaking about Blackwells,” referring to NVIDIA’s latest generation of AI processors. Industry observers interpreted the remark as a possible signal that limited versions of the chips could receive regulatory approval for sale to Chinese clients. The company’s valuation milestone follows a string of announcements that have kept NVIDIA at the center of technological innovation. During GTC, Huang revealed that NVIDIA expects $500 billion in GPU orders for AI workloads and plans to build seven new AI supercomputers in collaboration with the U.S. Department of Energy. One of these systems will feature more than 10,000 of NVIDIA’s new Blackwell GPUs - processors designed to handle the immense computational demands of generative AI and scientific research. Bridging Quantum and Classical Computing NVIDIA also announced a $1 billion strategic investment in Nokia to help develop next-generation 6G communications infrastructure, expanding its role beyond computing hardware into the backbone of global connectivity. The move ties into a broader set of partnerships unveiled during GTC, including collaborations with Cisco, T-Mobile, Palantir, and Oracle to accelerate wireless and enterprise AI initiatives. Other agreements announced include supplying 1,000 GPUs to pharmaceutical giant Eli Lilly to power AI-driven drug discovery, as well as working with Uber to develop a fleet of autonomous vehicles. NVIDIA’s technology will also underpin robotics and automation projects for manufacturers such as Foxconn, Caterpillar, and Belden, along with major cloud integrations for Amazon Web Services. The company’s new NVQLink architecture - introduced at GTC - aims to bridge quantum and classical computing, enabling faster data exchange between GPUs and quantum processors. NVIDIA said the open platform is being developed with quantum computing firms including Rigetti and IonQ, as well as several U.S. Department of Energy laboratories. AI Factories Despite its dominance, NVIDIA continues to navigate complex geopolitical dynamics. Its most recent quarterly report, released in late August, showed no sales of its H20 AI processors to China amid ongoing U.S. export restrictions. The White House previously indicated it had reached a tentative agreement allowing NVIDIA to ship certain chips to China in exchange for a 15% revenue share, though the company said the deal has yet to be finalized. For investors, NVIDIA’s momentum has been staggering. Shares have climbed more than 50% since the beginning of the year, adding hundreds of billions of dollars in market value. The rally accelerated this week following the GTC announcements and growing confidence that the AI sector’s growth trajectory remains robust. NVIDIA’s ascent to the $5 trillion mark underscores a seismic shift in the global tech landscape. As AI moves from experimentation to large-scale deployment, the company’s GPUs have become the essential infrastructure of digital intelligence - powering the world’s most advanced models, from ChatGPT to autonomous systems. CEO Jensen Huang has described this moment as the dawn of “AI factories” - data centers designed not to store information, but to generate intelligence. “The age of AI has begun,” Huang told attendees at GTC. “Every company will become an intelligence manufacturer, and our technology is the engine behind it.” With its market capitalization now rivaling the GDP of major economies, NVIDIA’s influence extends far beyond Silicon Valley. Its chips are shaping the pace of innovation across industries, governments, and research institutions. And with its latest breakthroughs in computing, networking, and quantum integration, NVIDIA appears intent on ensuring the AI revolution continues to run on its silicon.
29.10.2025 21:26 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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AtlasEdge Secures €253M Green Financing to Expand Lisbon Data Campus AtlasEdge, one of Europe’s fastest-growing data center operators, has secured €253 million in green financing to accelerate the expansion of its flagship Lisbon campus - a key development in the company’s broader plan to deliver sustainable, high-capacity digital infrastructure across the continent. The financing, structured as a seven-year senior secured Term Bond facility, is divided into two tranches: €63 million to complete the first phase (LIS001) and €190 million to fund construction of the second phase (LIS002). Banco Santander and ING acted as joint bookrunners for the deal, with ING also serving as the sole Sustainability Coordinator. The funding marks one of the largest sustainability-linked data center financing arrangements in Southern Europe, aligning with AtlasEdge’s commitment to operate on 100% renewable energy. Portugal’s strong renewable energy mix - being the world’s fourth-largest producer of solar and wind power - makes Lisbon a natural location for AtlasEdge’s latest expansion. The new campus will deliver a total of 30MW of IT capacity over three phases. LIS001 already has its capacity pre-contracted by top-tier cloud and digital infrastructure customers, with services expected to go live by late 2025. The second phase, LIS002, is in master planning, with readiness for service expected in 2028. Carcavelos Subsea Cable In a parallel move, AtlasEdge has acquired an additional 10,000 square meters of land adjacent to the site for LIS003, bringing the total future capacity of the Lisbon campus to 30MW. The expansion reinforces the company’s ambition to deploy more than 150MW of new capacity across Europe in the coming years. Strategically located less than 10 kilometers from the Carcavelos submarine cable landing station, the Lisbon campus will serve as a vital low-latency hub connecting Europe with Africa, the Middle East, and the Americas. The project further strengthens Portugal’s position as a digital gateway for hyperscalers, enterprises, and content delivery providers expanding their European footprints. “Today’s launch, the addition of LIS002 and LIS003, and this green financing demonstrate the momentum we’re building across the Iberian Peninsula – a region with significant opportunity to scale,” said AtlasEdge CEO Tesh Durvasula. “This is a sustainable, strategically located campus and a game-changer for customers operating in the Portuguese market.” Jonathan Hoo, CFO of AtlasEdge, emphasized the flexibility the financing provides. “This financing, together with the LIS003 acquisition, gives us the ability to execute our Lisbon growth plan with clear focus and control. It aligns our expansion with sustainability targets while delivering capacity where our customers need it,” he said. Financial partners underscored the project’s importance in shaping sustainable digital infrastructure across Europe. “ING’s appetite for the data center sector is stronger than ever, and we are proud to support AtlasEdge’s impressive expansion plans,” said Sicco Boomsma, Managing Director for EMEA at ING. “This innovative green financing provides the flexibility to scale the Lisbon campus, building on the successful launch of LIS001. Robert Drew, Managing Director and Head of TMT Global Banking for the UK at Banco Santander, added: “We are proud to be powering AtlasEdge’s growth in the Iberian Peninsula. This transaction underlines our commitment to digital infrastructure and sustainable development in Portugal, strengthening Lisbon’s role as a regional connectivity hub.” The investment underscores AtlasEdge’s growing role in Europe’s digital transformation strategy. The company, a joint venture between Liberty Global and DigitalBridge, is rapidly expanding its network of edge data centers across key European markets, focusing on energy efficiency and proximity to end users. Portugal is expected to become one of AtlasEdge’s core growth regions, with over €500 million in planned investments over the next few years. With the Lisbon project, the company is aligning sustainability, connectivity, and scalability - delivering infrastructure designed for the AI era while maintaining environmental responsibility.
29.10.2025 21:13 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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Lumen Expands Internet On-Demand to 10M U.S. Business Locations Lumen Technologies has announced one of its largest infrastructure expansions to date, bringing its Internet On-Demand service to more than 10 million additional business locations across the United States. The move marks a significant milestone in the company’s ongoing push to simplify connectivity for enterprises navigating digital transformation, hybrid cloud adoption, and AI-driven workloads. The announcement effectively extends Lumen’s Network-as-a-Service (NaaS) platform far beyond its existing footprint, allowing organizations to provision high-performance, scalable internet access in minutes - regardless of whether their sites fall within Lumen’s owned network. By partnering with other carriers for last-mile delivery, Lumen is offering a self-service platform that gives enterprises greater reach and agility without the complexity of negotiating multiple network contracts. “Customers tell us their biggest challenge is reach - getting reliable, on-demand connectivity wherever their business operates,” said Dave Ward, Chief Technology and Product Officer at Lumen Technologies. “For too long, businesses have been constrained by geography, but we’re eliminating that barrier. By extending our Internet On-Demand service beyond our network, we’re giving them the flexibility they need to compete.” Cloud-Like Connectivity Performance “By combining QTS’s scale and innovation with Lumen’s AI-ready infrastructure, we’re creating the digital backbone for the AI economy,” said Ashley Haynes-Gaspar, Chief Revenue Officer at Lumen.The Internet On-Demand platform delivers cloud-like performance for enterprise connectivity. Businesses can dynamically adjust bandwidth, choose from different routing options, and scale usage up or down in real time - all through a digital portal. Customers pay only for what they use, by the hour if desired, with additional options for enhanced security through Lumen Defender. The service aims to replicate the experience of cloud resource provisioning, giving IT teams the ability to deploy or expand connectivity as quickly as spinning up a virtual machine. The broader availability of the service is expected to benefit sectors that depend heavily on distributed, data-intensive operations. Retailers can ensure consistent digital experiences across hundreds of stores; financial institutions can enable secure branch connectivity; healthcare organizations can support telemedicine and real-time collaboration; and manufacturers can link production sites and warehouses into unified, adaptive networks. Among early adopters is Xcel Energy, a major U.S. utility company modernizing its grid and digital infrastructure across multiple states. Xcel is leveraging Lumen’s Internet On-Demand service to streamline off-network connectivity and accelerate deployment of grid analytics and monitoring systems. “As we modernize our grid and expand digital operations, our collaboration with Lumen is enabling the digital foundation for the future of energy,” said Tim Peterson, Chief Technology Officer at Xcel Energy. “The agility and reliability of on-demand connectivity allow faster site turn-ups, real-time monitoring, and scalable infrastructure for more resilient operations.” To deliver these capabilities, Lumen has also strengthened its ecosystem of partners, including Carrier Access, which supports enterprise connectivity for off-network sites. Together, the partners are addressing one of the most persistent pain points in enterprise IT: the fragmented nature of network service procurement and deployment. The company’s latest expansion builds on its existing suite of on-demand connectivity solutions, which includes Ethernet On-Demand for rapid, software-defined provisioning of private connections. Lumen plans to further enhance the platform with a next-generation multi-service interface device featuring AI-driven monitoring and automated troubleshooting - extending intelligent automation to network operations. QTS Data Centers The announcement coincides with a deeper partnership between Lumen and QTS Data Centers, a major global operator of hyperscale and enterprise data facilities. The companies revealed plans to integrate Lumen’s AI-ready infrastructure with 16 new QTS campuses across the United States, including sites in Texas, Arizona, Virginia, Georgia, Ohio, and Oregon. QTS will also leverage Lumen’s Wavelength services and Network-as-a-Service offerings to support customers building advanced AI and cloud environments. “QTS is excited to continue our strategic partnership with Lumen, our premier partner for Network-as-a-Service and software-defined networking technologies,” said Brent Bensten, Chief Technology Officer at QTS. “In an industry where innovation and scalability are essential, Lumen brings the technical expertise and expansive fiber network to help us meet growing demand. Together, we’re shaping the future of digital infrastructure.” Lumen will play multiple roles in the QTS ecosystem: as a fiber provider building diverse, high-capacity routes between campuses; as the NaaS and SDN provider powering QTS’s Switchboard fabric; as an intelligent network fabric integrator extending connectivity to public clouds and AI on-ramps; and as the backbone provider deploying a wavelength network for redundancy and site management. “This partnership exemplifies our connected ecosystem strategy,” said Ashley Haynes-Gaspar, Chief Revenue Officer at Lumen. “By combining QTS’s scale and innovation with Lumen’s AI-ready infrastructure, we’re creating the digital backbone for the AI economy. Hyperscalers need fast training, smart scaling, and secure connectivity - this delivers all three.” As AI and data-intensive workloads redefine how networks are designed, Lumen’s moves signal a broader shift in enterprise connectivity. Traditional models of static network provisioning are giving way to programmable, software-defined, and consumption-based services. By extending its Internet On-Demand reach and partnering with data center providers like QTS, Lumen is positioning itself as both a service provider and an enabler of next-generation digital ecosystems. For U.S. enterprises, the implications are significant: faster time to value, simpler network management, and access to a scalable infrastructure that adapts to the pace of digital transformation. For Lumen, it reinforces a broader strategic message—the network itself is no longer a static utility, but a flexible platform for innovation.
29.10.2025 20:04 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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LifeinCloud brings its VPS brand LumaDock to the US with a New York AZ LifeinCloud has introduced its first US-based availability zone for the LumaDock VPS platform, marking a major step in transatlantic expansion. The new zone in New York connects directly to key internet exchanges, offering low-latency access to user...
29.10.2025 19:33 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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Eaton Launches Next-Gen 800V Power Architecture for AI Data Centers Eaton has unveiled a next-generation reference architecture designed to accelerate the adoption of 800-volt direct current (VDC) power systems in artificial intelligence (AI) data centers. Eaton’s latest design supports NVIDIA’s 800 VDC architecture initiative and is positioned as a key step in Eaton’s broader “grid-to-chip” strategy aimed at addressing the soaring energy requirements of AI factories. The demand for AI computing power has caused data center energy loads to grow faster than existing electrical infrastructure can support. Complex AI workloads - driven by high-density GPU clusters - are pushing the limits of conventional alternating current (AC) architectures, prompting a shift toward more efficient, high-voltage DC systems. By moving to 800 VDC, companies like NVIDIA and Eaton aim to improve power delivery efficiency, reduce energy losses, and simplify the path to megawatt-scale rack configurations capable of supporting next-generation AI and high-performance computing environments. Eaton’s newly developed reference design combines its own power management technologies with NVIDIA’s AI infrastructure, offering a blueprint for data centers transitioning toward 800 VDC architectures. The system integrates several key components, including Eaton’s supercapacitors for fast-cycle backup power, high-efficiency busbar distribution technology compliant with the Open Rack V3 (ORV3) standard, and hot-aisle containment systems for cable and busway management. The design also incorporates Eaton’s latest DC connectors, engineered for the high current demands typical of large-scale AI deployments. The 800 VDC model marks a significant departure from traditional 400 V systems by allowing data centers to double the voltage while reducing energy loss from resistance and lowering the amount of copper and cabling required. The approach improves both efficiency and sustainability, offering operators a path toward more compact, cost-effective, and environmentally conscious data center designs. Eaton’s alignment with NVIDIA’s 800 VDC roadmap reflects an effort to support the rapid evolution of AI “factories” - massive data center clusters designed to process and train increasingly complex machine learning models. The collaboration with NVIDIA is part of Eaton’s larger effort to transform how energy is managed across the full lifecycle of digital infrastructure - from the electrical grid to the server chip. The company’s grid-to-chip strategy integrates power distribution, backup systems, and real-time monitoring into a unified framework, allowing operators to predict, protect, and optimize energy use across diverse workloads. Recent partnerships, including Eaton’s collaboration with Siemens Energy to develop modular data centers with on-site generation, underscore this holistic approach. The company has also introduced edge-based monitoring tools designed to anticipate and mitigate sudden AI-related power surges. Hyperscale and Colocation Providers The introduction of the 800 VDC architecture comes as hyperscale and colocation providers seek ways to improve sustainability without compromising performance. Traditional AC systems are reaching their practical limits for the power densities demanded by advanced GPU and AI accelerators. The streamlined DC-based systems Eaton is developing can help data centers handle multi-megawatt workloads with higher efficiency while reducing cooling and conversion losses. The inclusion of energy storage and smart distribution technologies further enhances reliability, ensuring stable operation even under fluctuating demand conditions. Industry analysts view the move toward 800 VDC as a defining moment for data center power architecture. The higher voltage reduces the current required for a given power level, significantly cutting down on distribution losses and heat generation - two of the biggest challenges facing operators running AI-intensive clusters. For large hyperscalers building AI factories with power demands that can exceed hundreds of megawatts, these efficiency gains translate directly into reduced operational costs and improved sustainability metrics. Eaton’s announcement comes amid a broader wave of infrastructure innovation aimed at supporting the industrialization of AI computing. The company plans to showcase its 800 VDC power management technology at the Open Compute Project Global Summit in San Jose, California, in October 2025. There, Eaton will demonstrate how its latest developments fit into the industry’s transition toward AI-driven, high-density, and energy-optimized data centers. Founded in 1911, Eaton operates in more than 160 countries and reported nearly $25 billion in revenue in 2024. The company’s expertise spans the utility, industrial, commercial, and aerospace sectors, and it continues to align its mission around sustainability and electrification. With the unveiling of its 800 VDC reference architecture, Eaton is positioning itself as a key player in the global effort to design the power systems that will drive the next generation of AI infrastructure.
29.10.2025 17:59 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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NVIDIA Invests $1B in Nokia to Build AI-Powered 6G Networks NVIDIA is expanding its ambitions beyond the realm of artificial intelligence and high-performance computing into the very networks that carry global data traffic. During his keynote at the company’s GPU Technology Conference (GTC) in Washington, D.C., CEO Jensen Huang announced that NVIDIA will invest $1 billion in Nokia, acquiring roughly 166 million new shares at $6.01 each - a 2.9% stake in the Finnish telecom company. The partnership marks a strategic shift for NVIDIA, signaling its intent to shape the infrastructure layer of next-generation wireless computing. Huang, known for his sweeping technological visions, framed telecommunications as the “digital nervous system” of the modern economy - a critical foundation that, in his view, has been dominated by non-U.S. vendors for too long. With the deal, NVIDIA aims to bring part of that technological leadership back under American influence, pairing its AI and accelerated computing platforms with Nokia’s deep expertise in network hardware. The collaboration will focus on creating AI-driven radio access networks (RAN) that can dynamically manage the massive data volumes generated by emerging applications in automation, robotics, and real-time analytics. Nokia, meanwhile, will use the capital infusion to fund AI development and ongoing operations. For Nokia, the partnership comes at a pivotal moment. Once synonymous with indestructible mobile phones, the company now designs and supplies much of the equipment behind global 5G infrastructure. Under its new CEO, Justin Hotard, a former Intel executive, Nokia has sharpened its focus on the convergence of AI and telecommunications. Hotard has described the shift from 5G to 6G as more than an incremental improvement - it’s a “fundamental redesign” that will push intelligence closer to users, moving computation from centralized data centers to the network edge. NVIDIA’s Modular Edge System Central to this new vision is NVIDIA’s Aerial RAN Computer Pro (ARC-Pro) - a modular edge system that merges connectivity, compute power, and sensor control into a single unit. Designed for low-latency environments such as autonomous drones, smart factories, and streaming applications, ARC-Pro runs on NVIDIA’s CUDA platform, enabling software-defined upgrades rather than full hardware replacements. Nokia’s AirScale radio platform will integrate this technology, allowing telecom operators to upgrade base stations through software updates - a potential cost-saving breakthrough for carriers facing the expensive transition to 6G. The alliance also extends to Dell Technologies, which will supply its PowerEdge servers to turn these edge deployments into reliable micro-data centers optimized for AI workloads. The combined effort illustrates a new chapter in the evolution of network infrastructure - one in which traditional telecoms, chipmakers, and enterprise hardware vendors converge to create intelligent, self-optimizing networks. For NVIDIA, the Nokia partnership is both a business expansion and a geopolitical statement. It positions the company at the heart of how digital intelligence moves through the world - from data center to device, and increasingly, across the airwaves.
29.10.2025 07:29 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
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DNS Firewall Market to Triple by 2032 Amid Rising Cyber Threats The global Domain Name System (DNS) Firewall market is entering a new phase of expansion, driven by surging cybersecurity threats, rapid cloud adoption, and the evolution of hybrid networks. According to a new study by Credence Research, the DNS firewall sector is expected to grow from USD 1.8 billion in 2024 to USD 5.51 billion by 2032, representing a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 15%. Once viewed as a secondary layer in network defense, DNS firewalls have now become a frontline security component, safeguarding enterprises from phishing, ransomware, data exfiltration, and command-and-control attacks. As organizations deepen their reliance on cloud platforms and distributed IT infrastructures, DNS firewalls are emerging as a foundational layer in Zero Trust security frameworks - providing visibility, segmentation, and automated protection at the domain level. Industry analysts point out that the global rise in DNS-targeted attacks is a major factor behind this rapid adoption. In 2025, for example, cybersecurity agencies reported a significant increase in DNS tunneling and amplification attacks, particularly targeting cloud-hosted applications and enterprise SaaS platforms. Attackers increasingly exploit DNS as a covert communication channel for data theft or botnet orchestration. In response, large enterprises across banking, telecom, and healthcare sectors are accelerating the deployment of AI-driven DNS filtering systems to block malicious domains before they connect. Leading vendors are also expanding their DNS security portfolios. Akamai Technologies, for instance, recently integrated zero trust DNS protection modules into its enterprise suite, while Cisco Systems enhanced its Umbrella platform with machine learning capabilities for real-time anomaly detection. These innovations reflect a broader industry movement toward autonomous, predictive cybersecurity architectures, where DNS protection serves as both a detection and prevention mechanism. At the same time, cloud transformation and remote work models have reshaped network security requirements. Organizations that operate across multiple cloud providers now rely on DNS firewalls for consistent policy enforcement and secure routing between SaaS environments such as AWS, Microsoft 365, and Salesforce. Vendors like Infoblox have responded by enhancing cloud-managed platforms such as BloxOne Threat Defense, optimized for distributed corporate networks. As corporate boundaries dissolve, DNS firewalls provide essential control over user access and endpoint visibility, enabling teams to maintain compliance and performance across geographies. DNS Configurations Regulatory pressure is another accelerating factor. Frameworks such as the EU NIS2 Directive, NIST’s Zero Trust Architecture, and data sovereignty laws in emerging regions increasingly mandate proactive domain-level filtering. Financial institutions in Europe, for instance, are integrating DNS firewall reporting into network audit systems to support compliance and forensic analysis. These policies not only elevate DNS-layer security from optional to essential but also reinforce the role of DNS firewalls as a compliance enabler in digital transformation initiatives. Despite strong growth drivers, the market faces several structural challenges. Implementation and maintenance costs remain a major hurdle - especially for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). High licensing fees, integration complexities, and the ongoing need for threat intelligence updates limit the technology’s reach in cost-sensitive regions. Moreover, many organizations still underestimate the importance of DNS-layer protection, prioritizing endpoint and perimeter security instead. The lack of skilled professionals capable of managing DNS firewalls within multi-cloud architectures further slows adoption. Legacy integration poses another obstacle. Many public sector entities and educational institutions still operate on outdated DNS configurations that struggle to interface with modern security features. These compatibility issues often result in delayed deployments or performance bottlenecks. Upgrading legacy networks to support real-time DNS interception and analysis remains a costly but necessary step toward holistic cyber resilience. In parallel, several market trends are reshaping the industry’s trajectory. One is the integration of DNS firewalls into Zero Trust frameworks. Companies such as Palo Alto Networks have embedded DNS traffic controls into their Prisma Access platform to strengthen micro-segmentation and limit lateral movement inside corporate networks. This alignment ensures that every connection request - whether internal or external - is verified at the DNS layer, reducing attack surfaces and reinforcing identity-driven access policies. AI/ML - Hybrid Cloud Another key development is the use of artificial intelligence and machine learning to enhance threat detection. Modern DNS firewalls increasingly rely on AI models to analyze billions of queries in real time, identifying suspicious domains and traffic anomalies faster than human analysts can. Both Akamai and F5 Networks have implemented machine learning algorithms to automatically recognize new threat patterns, shifting DNS protection toward proactive and autonomous defense models. The rise of cloud-native and hybrid deployments is also transforming how organizations implement DNS security. Rather than relying solely on on-premises infrastructure, companies are embracing flexible, cloud-managed solutions that integrate with existing DevOps and orchestration tools. BlueCat Networks, for example, developed Adaptive DNS, a hybrid platform compatible with Google Cloud and AWS environments, giving enterprises a single control plane for multi-cloud DNS security. This flexibility is particularly appealing for organizations managing multiple data centers or regional offices that require scalable, policy-driven DNS protection. Looking ahead, emerging markets present vast opportunities for DNS firewall vendors. Rapid digitization across the Middle East, Southeast Asia, and Latin America is driving demand for national threat intelligence frameworks and stronger enterprise defenses. Programs such as India’s Digital Security Mission are pushing sectors like banking and telecommunications to adopt DNS-level controls. As these economies build out their cloud ecosystems, suppliers offering affordable, localized, and compliance-ready DNS firewalls stand to gain significant market share. Additionally, the global boom in 5G networks and IoT devices is set to amplify demand for real-time DNS security. Billions of connected devices generate continuous streams of DNS traffic—often without native protection. Telecom operators in countries like Japan and South Korea have already started embedding DNS firewall modules directly into their 5G core networks to safeguard device communications and minimize latency. As IoT adoption scales, DNS firewalls capable of handling massive query volumes and edge-level traffic filtering will become indispensable. A parallel growth avenue lies in Managed Security Services (MSSPs), which are now bundling DNS protection into broader cybersecurity packages for SMBs, says Credence Research. Providers such as GoDaddy and Cloudflare have introduced DNS firewall services tailored to smaller enterprises that lack in-house expertise. By offering DNS security as a managed or subscription-based service, MSSPs lower adoption barriers and create new recurring revenue streams while helping businesses meet compliance and resilience standards. Overall, the DNS firewall market’s rapid evolution mirrors the broader transformation of enterprise security - from static defenses to adaptive, cloud-integrated ecosystems. As cyber threats grow more sophisticated and data volumes continue to surge, DNS-layer protection is no longer a niche technology - it is a critical enabler of trustworthy digital infrastructure. With cloud-native scalability, AI-driven automation, and regulatory momentum converging, DNS firewalls are poised to become an indispensable element of enterprise cybersecurity architecture through the next decade.
29.10.2025 07:29 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0

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