NOC at Georgia State University
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
The Network Operations Center (or NOC) at Georgia State University, renamed the Technology Operations Center (TOC) in 2007[clarification needed], is a 5,500 sq ft (510 m2) showcase facility in downtown Atlanta, Georgia. It is staffed and managed 24x7x365 by the university's Information Systems & Technology (IS&T) department and is part of IS&T's Technology Infrastructure division. A staff of 16 technicians provide monitoring and troubleshooting of network services and environmental control systems such as HVAC and power. The TOC technicians are also in charge of racking all devices, providing power and network connectivity to hosts, and after-hours Help Center support for the university. [citation needed]
The GSU TOC has been an environmentally "green" facility since 2003. There are no batteries used anywhere in the delivery of protected power to the approximately 500 hosts and servers housed in the NOC. [citation needed] Protected power is provided by a 300 kVA (250 KW) CAT-branded Active Power flywheel/generator system[1] and three ActivePower CoolAir DC UPS[2][better source needed] units (2 are 100 kVA (80 KW) and 1 is 80 kVA (40 KW)).
During the Fall of 2006, the Georgia State University underwent a US$4,000,000 network renovation where all of the networking equipment across the campus was upgraded and replaced without any detectable downtime to the delivery of campus network services of the TOC facility.[3] This network upgrade has been done in preparation of a new AVAYA IP Telephony (IPT or VoIP) system that replaced the university's analog POTS telecommunications system in the summer of 2007.[citation needed]
GSU's TOC is home to the GALILEO Interconnected Libraries, the New Georgia Encyclopedia, the online presence of the Jimmy Carter Library, and three SURAGrid-networked IBM P575 Supercomputers.[4]
The facility has been the subject of presentations at several national AFCOM conferences as well as three virtual tours hosted by AFCOM.[citation needed]
News articles
[edit]http://www.energyvortex.com/pages/headlinedetails.cfm?id=2393 – Georgia State University's Network Operations Center Selects CoolAir Back-Up Power Solution
http://www.activepower.com/markets/data-center.html – Data Center
https://web.archive.org/web/20061013172941/http://www2.gsu.edu/~wwwexa/news/archive/general/06_0831-computergrid.htm – Southern Schools Form Computer Grid
http://midmarket.eweek.com/article/University+Breaks+All+the+Storage+Rules/217131_1.aspx – University Breaks All the Storage Rules, eWeek Magazine
http://www.networkworld.com/news/2007/092007-data-center-overcrowding.html?page=3 – IT Grapples with Overcrowded, Energy-guzzling Data Centers, Network World
References
[edit]- ^ Caterpillar: Products>Power Generation>UPS
- ^ Uninterruptible Power Supply – Active Power
- ^ "Georgia State-- IS&T NEWS". Archived from the original on 2006-12-15. Retrieved 2006-12-15.
- ^ IBM Supercharges SURAgrid[dead link ]