Cisco Consulting Shop in Gilroy, California, CA:


Gold Partner VAR Contact Form <a href="https://secure.blueoctane.net//forms/C1S4B7QRP2KI">Click Here To Load This Formexperts.com Form</a>

Cisco Data Center Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) - Call (888) 233-6471.


PBM IT Data Center Solutions are Cisco Gold Partner certified. Our staff is uniquely qualified to handle your data center needs such as data backup, data recovery, data storage, fiber channel, fiber channel over Ethernet, FCoE, iSCSI, network attached storage, NAS, remote backup, storage area networks, SAN, SAN management, SAN storage, servers, and storage systems.

Q. What data center requirements involve the combined efforts of facilities and IT staff?
Operating a data center at peak efficiency and reliability requires the combined efforts of facilities and IT staff.

Approximately half of the power consumed by a data center is required for cooling. As heat load increases, more floor space must be reserved for cooling equipment. Without high ceilings (20 feet or more), the hot exhaust air of servers is likely to become in-take air for servers mounted in the upper portion of a cabinet.

Where possible, use outside free air as an alternative to expensive air conditioning.

Operating a Data Center not only requires a comprehensive skill set, but also a little forethought into the overall industry landscape.

Server virtualization is the masking of server resources (including the number and identity of individual physical servers, processors, and operating systems) from server users. The intention is to spare the user from having to understand and manage complicated details of server resources while increasing resource sharing and utilization and maintaining the capacity to expand later.

Desktop virtualization enables a centralized server to deliver and manage individualized desktops remotely. This gives users a full client experience, but lets IT staff provision, manage, upgrade and patch them virtually, instead of physically.

To qualify as a true enterprise solution, a storage management system must be able to scale across the entire enterprise. This means it must be able to handle multiple servers spread across wide geographical areas. The solution should further leverage technologies such as clustering and load balancing to support hundreds or even thousands of client computers. It also must support various network infrastructures and firewall configurations.

New computing resources can be deployed in a just-in-time approach. Traditional physical and virtual workloads can be easily migrated between servers through remote management, regardless of physical connectivity. The Cisco Unified Computing System improves availability, security, agility, and performance through an integrated architecture.

Green IT can be defined as research in and use of IT in an efficient and environmentally friendly manner.

High availability is a system design protocol and associated implementation that ensures a certain degree of operational continuity during a given measurement period.

Next-generation data centers have specific server networking needs, and the Cisco Nexus 5010 one-rack unit (RU) switch provides an Ethernet-based unified fabric that's designed to meet those needs.

Go back