Glossary - R
This is a glossary of older terms. While many of the definitions are unchanged, some of the definitions may be out of date and some of the terms may no longer be in use in the Data Center industry. This legacy glossary provides definitions for hundreds of information and communications technology (ICT) and data center terms and acronyms. Arranged alphabetically and searchable, the glossary explains common industry vocabulary.
A component type of data center class server. Source: Intel
Rear door heat exchanger, a classification type of data center cooling for high heat density air cooling. Source: NVIDIA
Registered memory DIMM. Source: ASHRAE
A specialized IT Cabinet rear door with a built-in heat exchanger that uses a radiator where the hottest servers are operating. chills the hot air from the back of the servers and cools it immediately. The chilled door contains fans and a coolant. The coolant absorbs the heat, returning cooler air to the data center. Source: Supermicro
Standard designed to deliver simple and secure management for converged, hybrid IT and the Software Defined Data Center (SDDC). Both human readable and machine capable, Redfish leverages common Internet and web services standards to expose information directly to the modern tool chain. Source: DMTF
The degree to which the result of a measurement, calculation, or specification can be depended on to be accurate. Source: Oxford Languages
Responsible, inclusive, and sustainable world, enabled (through technology). Source: Intel
The potential for adverse consequences where something of value is at stake and where the occurrence and degree of an outcome is uncertain. In the context of the assessment of climate impacts, the term risk is often used to refer to the potential for adverse consequences of a climate-related hazard, or of adaptation or mitigation responses to such a hazard, on lives, livelihoods, health and well-being, ecosystems and species, economic, social, and cultural assets, services (including ecosystem services), and infrastructure. Risk results from the interaction of vulnerability (of the affected system), its exposure over time (to the hazard), as well as the (climate-related) hazard and the likelihood of its occurrence. Source: IPCC