Fujitsu Limited said it plans to embark on a series of field trials together with Fujitsu Research Institute Limited at its Yokohama Data Center, aiming to promote the digital transformation of data centers, boosting operational resilience and process automation by utilizing private 5G network technology for equipment inspection.
This verification trial, which will run from December 1 until March 17, 2023, was selected by Japan's Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications as one of its "Development Demonstrations Aimed at Achieving Challenge-Solving Local 5G in Fiscal 2022."
The trial will involve the use of a robot equipped with a 4K camera to capture video data of equipment at the data center, including servers. This data will be transmitted locally by private 5G and a system will be established to analyze on-site conditions with AI to detect any abnormalities at an early stage. Fujitsu aims to create a system that can support the monitoring of conditions on the ground and recovery work even from a remote location in the event of a disaster or emergency by taking full advantage of the high-speed transmission capabilities of private 5G technology.
Robust disaster management for resilient data centers
As the digitization of society accelerates and the amount of data distributed rapidly increases, data centers that store and process vast amounts of data are positioned as part of the core infrastructure that supports the digital society of the 21st century. Highlighting this growing significance, the Japanese government's vision for a "Digital Garden City Nation" calls for the establishment of regional data center facilities with an eye to reducing the risk posed by disasters and other vulnerabilities resulting from the centralization of data centers. As the importance of regional data centers continues to grow, their number is expected to increase rapidly in the future.
The key to stable data center operations is high quality maintenance and inspection and rapid recovery in the event of a disaster or other emergency. However, the decrease in the working population and difficulties in securing talent, remains a challenge in many parts of Japan, and this shortage is especially acute in rural areas. Maintaining and improving inspection quality with a limited number of personnel and reducing workload represent an urgent issue for data center operators.
Source: Fujitsu
© JCN Newswire
8 Comments
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Yrral
Japan still using 4g like me,that sad
ShortMemories
Surely a system that has an LED knows when it's having a problem such that it can turn it to red or whatever the camera is looking for, or a monitoring system talking to that system does. There is a reason that nobody has bothered to put crashcart cameras in data centers and it has nothing to do with a lack of 4k cameras or 5g networks.
When you outsource to fujitsu though, this is what their staff do, manually walk through and check LEDs and check a box on paper with a pencil so they think this is automation and digital
Imagine the comfort of the operator, knowing his alert message arrived via 5g! instead of 100ms it took 5ms! wow!! It took 1000x that time to read the email alert though.
Jozef
Japan can not even make 4g work properly.
internet user friendliness in Japan is a joke compared to the rest of the world
wallace
Many areas have 5G but not in my location. I have a 5G phone so the provider charges a little more even though I don’t have it.
I have no problems with my service even in the countryside.
painkiller
wallaceNov. 8 08:09 pm JST
Except you don't have 5G in the countryside.
wallace
painkiller
yes that is what I posted.
painkiller
wallaceToday 02:28 am JST
And no television too.
wallace
painkiller
I did not post anything about television.
The post is about 5G.
Not sure we will ever see 5G coverage outside of the cities. My 4G coverage is good and I have average speeds of 50 Mbps.
Does your area have 5G?