As a university cadet working for IBM in the late 80s I remember getting 
inducted into the Westpac data centres and getting a long explanation of what 
to do when the halon system went off – where the breathing gear was, where the 
exits were, to basically just drop everything and run.

Have been inducted into a few DCs in the last 3 years and can’t remember that 
being part of the induction at all – although given I already knew it I may 
have just glossed over that part.

--
Chris Ford
Chief Technology Officer

INABOX GROUP
m 0401 988 844 e [email protected]
t 02 8275 6871 w www.inaboxgroup.com.au

From: AusNOG <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Paul Wilkins
Sent: Thursday, 13 December 2018 10:53 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [AusNOG] [AUSNog] : Re Data Centre Fire Suppression Safety

Every data centre has a fire suppression system. We're not used to thinking of 
this as a hazardous environment, but consequent to two techs being found dead 
working on a fire suppression system in 
Antarctica<https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/dec/12/antarctica-two-technicians-dead-mcmurdo-station-ross-island>,
 I find myself wondering yet again, why there aren't more stringent controls 
around the fire suppression systems in data centres: viz - when you enter a 
data centre, how confident can you be you're not going to be quietly 
asphyxiated?

Kind regards

Paul Wilkins
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