Daisy chooses Virtus for new data hosting facility

Virtus Data Centres (“Virtus”) has signed a 15 year agreement with the Daisy Group plc; an AIM listed company.

The Daisy Group, a leading provider of unified business communication services, has taken 500kW of IT load at Virtus’ brand new LON1 data centre primarily for hosting its customers’ business critical IT platforms.


Andrew Goldwater, Managing Director of New Business at Daisy Group plc, says: “We are delighted to announce that we have added a new hosting facility to our already extensive data centre portfolio. The addition of the North London data centre comes at a crucial turning point for hosting services, as we believe 2013 will see a big take up of hybrid cloud solutions.


“That’s why we have invested in three new people within our hosting team, further developed our cloud offering, and recently acquired the management of new premises and customers; all in the last six months”.


Warren Barrie, MD, Virtus, commented: “At Virtus we recognise that successful businesses like Daisy rely heavily on the service quality of its partners and suppliers. We are committed to delivering a scalable infrastructure platform to support Daisy’s expansion across both its cloud and hosting businesses. Both Daisy and Virtus have committed to a long-term partnership set to develop across multiple Virtus data centre sites”.
 

Insecure cloud configurations create widespread risk, highlighting the urgent need for unified...
Experian, a global data and technology company, is embarking on the next phase of its cloud...
Private cloud now rated as a strategic equal to public cloud, driven by cost predictability, GenAI...
NVIDIA is building what it says is the world’s first industrial AI cloud for European...
The pilot program allows faster, more transparent procurement for cloud software buyers.
M247 Group, a leading international provider of hosting, data transport, and cloud solutions, has...
Datacloud Global Congress has achieved record attendance, with a 49% increase on last year’s...
AI could double the strain or solve it.