Emerson Nform And Interface Products Network Card User Manual


 
Maximizing Your Investment
Through Adaptive Monitoring
Obtaining the information needed to know about critical
support equipment for computer systems has never
been easier…or more cost-efficient.
What You Don’t Know
Can Hurt You
A small problem in a computer or
communications facility can quickly
escalate into a disaster. Knowing
what is happening with power
and cooling equipment can keep
that protective "envelope" at peak
operating efficiency, vital to
system reliability.
Only Liebert can offer full-scale
monitoring and control of these
critical support systems by
providing the ability to gather
operating information from each
piece of equipment and pull it
together in one central location.
Finding A Better Way To
Monitor The Evolving
Critical Space
Monitoring the critical space is
essential. The problem is, the
critical space has evolved and can
take on many shapes and sizes,
from the traditional centralized data
center, to the cutting-edge
distributed topologies of telecom,
wireless and retail operations.
Liebert's mission is to protect the
critical space, whether consolidated
in the data center or distributed
throughout the network — and
monitoring is an essential
component of any high-availability
solution.
Just as one model of UPS or air
conditioner cannot fulfill the
requirements of every application,
Liebert offers a suite of monitoring
products to meet the varying
requirements of the vast spectrum
of critical space applications.
From leak detection to discrete
monitoring, unattended orderly
computer shutdown to enterprise-
wide monitoring, Liebert offers
hardware and software solutions
that fit.
This full-scale monitoring
capability allows for consolidation
of all components of critical space
infrastructure into an organized,
logical, high-availability system.
And because different people need
to know different information
about your support equipment,
Liebert will provide the tools to
determine what specific data should
go where.
2
(a) 5%
(b) 4%
(c) 23%
(d) 42%
(e) 26%
(a) Up to $50,000 per hour
(b) Over $50,000 per hour 4%
(c) Unkown 23%
(d) $1,000 per hour 42%
(e) $10,000 per hour 26%
Source: Infonetics, Cio Magazine/June 15, 2000
Cost of Downtime
How much does and hour of downtime cost
your business?