New facilities in Dallas, Texas, and Washington, D.C., part of IBM’s global cloud expansion with more than 55 global cloud data centers
ARMONK, N.Y. – 26 April 2017: IBM (NYSE: IBM) today announced the opening of four new IBM Cloud DataCenters in the United States to meet growing enterprise demand for cloud infrastructure that can provide access to services like IoT, blockchain, quantum computing and cognitive.
IBM Cloud’s global network includes cloud data centers in key local markets around the world so clients can run their data and applications locally to meet performance and regulatory needs. With data centers across 19 countries and six continents, enterprises can provision cloud infrastructure when and where they need. The new cloud data centers in the U.S. can provide clients with infrastructure they need to manage and gain insight from their data while also taking advantage of IBM’s advanced cognitive services with Watson on the IBM Cloud.
The opening of two new facilities in Dallas, Texas, and two new facilities in Washington, D.C., is a key part of IBM’s investment to expand its global cloud footprint in 2017, which includes the opening of eight new cloud datacenters around the world in the first half of the year.
As enterprises increasingly turn to AI to generate value from their data, demand for public and hybrid cloud infrastructure continues to grow. According to IDC, worldwide spending on public cloud services and infrastructure will reach $203.4 billion by 2020, a 21.5% compound annual growth rate – nearly seven times the rate of overall IT spending growth. [1]
“IBM is making major investments to expand our global cloud data centers in 2017 and provide the infrastructure necessary for enterprises to run the cognitive, big data, blockchain and IoT workloads they require,” said John Considine, general manager for cloud infrastructure, IBM. “IBM’s growing global cloud footprint across 19 countries and six continents gives enterprises the flexibility and scale to run their most complex workloads when and where they need.”
The new U.S. facilities can enable companies to digitize business and operations and drive cognitive innovation through the IBM Cloud. Clients of all sizes are already taking advantage of the benefits of the IBM Cloud including Bitly, Halliburton, Kimberly-Clark Professional and Projetech.
IBM’s Expanding Global Cloud Footprint
IBM now has more than 55 global cloud data centers in 19 countries spanning six continents to help enterprises manage and gain insight into their data no matter where it resides. The opening of additional facilities in Dallas, Texas, and Washington, D.C., marks 22 IBM data centers across the U.S.
The news reinforces IBM’s commitment to expand its cloud presence around the world in 2017 and builds on strong global momentum from 2016. In 2016, IBM opened the industry’s first cloud data center in the Nordics as well as a new cloud data center located outside of Seoul in South Korea. Additionally, IBM announced in November that it is tripling its cloud data center capacity in the U.K. with four new facilities.
Each of the four new facilities now open in the U.S. has the capacity for thousands of physical servers and offers a full range of cloud infrastructure services, including bare metal servers, virtual servers, storage, security services and networking. With services deployed on demand and full remote access and control, customers can create their ideal public, private or hybrid cloud environments.
IBM’s cloud infrastructure is cognitive at the core and uniquely geared for big data workloads. IBM operates one of the largest fleets of bare metal servers and offers the latest NVIDIA® GPU accelerators – including the Tesla® P100, Tesla K80 and the Tesla M60 – to enable enterprises to quickly and efficiently run compute-heavy workloads, such as AI, deep learning and high performance data analytics. Through its partnership with SAP, IBM offers clients SAP certified Bluemix infrastructure to run their business-critical SAP applications on the cloud.
About IBM Cloud:
For more information, visit: http://www.ibm.com/cloud-computing.
[1] IDC: Worldwide Semiannual Public Cloud Services Spending Guide, February 20, 2017