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Gartner Forecasts Security and Risk Management Spending in India to Grow 12% in 2024

  GenAI-Driven Attacks Require Changes to Application and Data Security Practices and User Monitoring End-user spending on security and risk management (SRM) in India is forecast to total $2.9 billion in 2024, an increase of 12.4% from 2023, according to a new forecast from Gartner, Inc. Indian organizations will continue to increase their security spending through 2024 due to legacy IT modernization using cloud technology, industry demand for digital platforms, updated regulatory environment, and continuous remote/hybrid work. “In 2024, chief information and security officers (CISOs) in India will prioritize their spending on SRM to improve organizational resilience and compliance,” said  Shailendra Upadhyay , Sr Principal at Gartner. “With the introduction of stringent government measures mandating security breach reporting and digital  data protection , CISOs are facing heightened responsibility in safeguarding critical assets against evolving cyber threats.” Gartner a...

Reducing Data Centre Costs


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Published on Friday, 01 June 2012 13:51
Hewlett-Packard (HP) has unveiled the architecture for a data center that requires no net energy from traditional power grids. The architecture, combined with holistic energy-management techniques, allows organisations to cut power usage by 30 percent, as well as dependence on grid power and costs by 80 percent.





The vendor aims to provide businesses the potential to operate data centers using local renewable resources, removing dependencies such as location, energy supply and costs. This has the possibility of introducing IT services to firms of all sizes.



“Information technology has the power to be an equalizer across societies globally, but the cost of IT services is prohibitive and inhibits widespread adoption,” says Cullen Bash, interim director, Sustainable Ecosystems Research Group, HP Labs.



“The HP Net-Zero Energy Data Center not only aims to minimise the environmental impact of computing, but also has a goal of reducing energy costs associated with data-center operations to extend the reach of IT accessibility globally.”

The architecture integrates energy and cooling supply from local renewable sources, with a demand-management approach that allows the scheduling of IT workloads based on resource availability and performance requirements.

For example, noncritical, delay-tolerant workloads could be scheduled during daylight hours to coincide with solar supply for data centers equipped with photovoltaic energy generation. In this way, demand can be “shaped” according to resource availability to reduce reliance on nonrenewable resources.



As a result, organisations can lower overall data-center costs. Starting from capital investment in upfront infrastructure technology to the operational costs of workload execution—enabling more customers to take advantage of IT services.

------HP

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