Monitoring technology is increasing the power imbalance between companies and workers. Protections lag far behind.
But the growth of large computer data centers may impede that clean up. For nearly a year, construction crews have been putting up low-rise buildings in the Racine County community of Mount ...
the U.S. is seeing a rapid rise in data center development and a surge in demand for power to fuel the additional load. Leading research estimates that data centers could consume up to 9% of U.S ...
Data centers support 84,900 Ohio jobs Data center industry makes economic case Ohio not major player in industry A new report from a data center trade association seeks to counter growing data ...
Starting this week, a tap of a credit card or smartphone is all that's needed to get aboard a VIA Metropolitan Transit bus. The local transit agency says it has finished installing new fare boxes ...
The data center industry supported more than 485,000 jobs and contributed $35 billion in labor income to Texas in 2023, a new study from the Data Center Coalition reported Wednesday morning.
Johor in Malaysia is being transformed by the construction of giant data centers JOHOR BAHRU, Malaysia -- Winson Lau has always had contingency plans. But he wasn't prepared for data centers.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (WCMH) — According to Data Center Map, there are 173 data centers in Ohio, 106 of which are in Columbus. The economic impact of these data centers has been widely discussed ...
Despite predictions about its demise, the enterprise data center is alive and well ... Another wrinkle is the “AI-in-a-box” offering that enables CIOs to deploy turnkey, prebuilt AI packages.
The oil company plans to build natural gas power plants that will be directly connected to data centers used by technology companies for artificial intelligence and other services. By Rebecca F.
The data center market is booming, driven by AI demand. Just last week, OpenAI said that it plans to team up with backers including SoftBank to spend at least $100 billion on data center ...
Exxon Mobil chairman and CEO Darren Woods used the company's fourth-quarter earnings call on Friday to remind investors that nuclear-powered data centers are a long way away from the current reality.