Compass Datacenters Puts Wearable Technology To Work In The Data Center
The pilot project in Compass' Columbus data center facility taps into the potential of wearable technology on data center professionals.
Compass Datacenters has launched a beta software project that is linking mobile and wearable technology with data center management processes in ways that will change the way companies operate and maintain their data center facilities. The pilot project is taking place in Compass' suburban Columbus data center in collaboration with American Electric Power (AEP), which the facility was built for, and software-systems developer ICARUS Ops, Inc. The project, which is designed in three phases, will bring together Compass' detailed operational documentation for its data centers with a software app designed for wearable visor technology (e.g. Google Glass), Android mobile devices and a comprehensive web application that provides management dashboards that tie all the elements together.
"Wearable technology is very cool. But do you know what else is cool? Getting all of your employees to operate and maintain your data center facility by the book so you get the most availability out of your data center. That is very cool, and it turns out that wearable technology is the perfect way to achieve that goal," said Chris Crosby, CEO of Compass Datacenters. "By converting our extensive facility documentation and best practices from the traditional paper documents into actionable, interactive checklists that a data center worker interacts with via wearable technology, that employee immediately becomes a walking, talking encyclopedia of knowledge about your facility. Plus, the wearables allow for complete interaction without having to take off personal protection equipment (PPE), making sure that OSHA compliance does not mean shirking the maintenance procedures due to inconvenience. The interactive checklists track and time stamp activities, enabling audit-friendly records while ensuring that human error is reduced dramatically."