Probably Chatsworth(CPI) MegaFrame. Those seem to be the most common ones I see.
On Wed, Jun 18, 2014 at 3:14 PM, Jack Coats <[email protected]> wrote: > I worked for company and we built a public data center. One of our > 'products' was rack space. We had a few rows of shared racks where > customers could rent 'quarter racks'. At that level there were bolted in > separators. Power and network were available to each section of the rack > separately. Network was available but not required per each customers > needs. > > I wish I could remember who made the racks. They had separate lockable > doors on each section. We had full, half, and quarter rack segments > available. Each with separate power and network connections. > > There were separate power strips in each cabinet section that were wired > individually into the building common UPS. > > We did have two separate networks running over physically separate > networks. One was for the outside and for public networks, the other went > to our backup network that was also used for monitoring by data center > personnel (not gatewayed to the 'outside'). > > Keeping 'baddies' from the internet away from customers was one goal. A > second goal was keeping customers away from each other. > > (the rest of the story: The data center went online just as the 'bubble' > burst back around 2001 and failed almost immediately. It was small, about > 20,000 sq feet. 3 1MW generators, 2 1MW APC UPSes, two separate power > feeds, and multiple network providers from different physical directions > coming into the building. Redundant air chillers. Pretty much fully > redundant all around. A pretty sweet setup. Last I heard it was being > used as a 'backup center' by a consortium of hospitals in Houston to backup > hepa data. It was a major POP for Phonoscope who provide fiber connections > in the area, for a price.) > > _______________________________________________ > Tech mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.lopsa.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tech > This list provided by the League of Professional System Administrators > http://lopsa.org/ > >
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