Energy efficient stories
Liquid cooling is gaining ground as AI data centres outgrow air systems, with the market forecast to hit USD $1.3 billion by 2032.
New Surface models aim to give professionals longer battery life, faster graphics and mixed AI workflows across local and cloud computing.
Regional Victoria could host one of Australia's first integrated data and energy precincts as demand for capacity shifts beyond Sydney and Melbourne.
The ranking underscores rising demand for safer backup power in data centres, where AI loads are sharpening scrutiny of energy use and emissions.
Standardised blueprints could help operators add AI capacity faster as rising power and cooling demands strain data centre builds worldwide.
The move should cut AI inference costs for Zoho while giving the software group tighter control over data, power use and its infrastructure stack.
Rising memory demand in AI and cloud systems could push operators to rethink costly DRAM-heavy builds after the acquisition.
Peer-selected grants will help 12 start-ups expand in the US and Europe, with the biggest awards going to CIRT and Recovolt.
Data-centre operators face rising power bills as Trane's HFO shift and liquid-cooling push cut emissions and HVAC costs.
The 36 MW project near Stavanger can now proceed to final design and construction, with service targeted for the second half of 2027.
Fears are mounting that the UK data-centre boom could strain grids and water supplies while driving emissions above the nation's footprint by 2030.
The study aims to define the infrastructure needed for quantum and AI workloads in hot, humid data centre hubs such as Singapore and Batam.
The rollout could cut power costs for manufacturers and logistics firms as rooftop generation shields them from rising network charges.
The funding will help meet rising demand for AI infrastructure as Orbital speeds up deployment of modular data centre units and cooling fluids.
The Berrinba site will give Metso extra warehousing capacity in southern Queensland, helping speed parts and machinery to mines across eastern Australia.
Devices that anticipate routines could cut friction for New Zealand users as Samsung extends hyper-personalised AI across phones, wearables and the home.
Pressure to add AI capacity is pushing developers towards modular builds that can be launched in 24 weeks rather than years.
British firms seeking compliant AI processing can now keep inference workloads inside the UK as energy and data rules tighten.
Six hours of unplanned downtime a year is prompting UK data centre operators to rethink maintenance as predictive tools remain rare.
Developers face fresh planning pressure as the charter demands renewable power, low water use and heat links for new Scottish sites.