Amsterdam offers MENA tech companies the perfect European gateway with 111ms latency to Dubai, simplified GDPR compliance, and comprehensive connectivity to European markets. OpenMetal provides enterprise bare metal servers and OpenStack private cloud in Digital Realty’s AMS3 facility with predictable pricing, 24×7 support, and flexible deployment options for companies expanding from Dubai, Saudi Arabia, and across the Middle East.
Category: Data Centers
Amsterdam’s submarine cable infrastructure connects to African markets with workable latency for most applications. This guide covers why companies target both continents, realistic latency numbers to major African cities, cost savings up to $188K annually, use cases that work well, and when you need African infrastructure.
How startups deploy global infrastructure for under $15K monthly versus $50K+ on AWS. Covers when hyperscaler credits make sense, OpenMetal Startup eXcelerator benefits, real multi-region configurations, cost comparisons by stage, hybrid strategies, and growth paths from seed through Series B.
Complete guide to multi-region infrastructure across three continents. OpenMetal’s Los Angeles, Ashburn, Amsterdam, and Singapore locations enable disaster recovery, global performance, and data sovereignty compliance for 70% less than hyperscaler costs.
Companies expanding into Asia-Pacific choose Singapore for its central location providing 15-30ms latency to SEA’s major cities, infrastructure costs 50% below Tokyo, and generous bandwidth allocations. This article covers 10 ideal Singapore data center use cases from gaming to fintech with OpenMetal bare metal and Cloud Core pricing.
Virtual data centers provide cloud-based infrastructure through shared, virtualized resources. While they work well for certain use cases, hosted private cloud solutions like OpenMetal offer dedicated hardware, predictable performance, and fixed costs that better suit high-performance and production workloads.
Discover how to architect multi-site high availability infrastructure that maintains continuous operation across geographic locations. This comprehensive guide covers OpenStack deployment patterns, Ceph storage replication, networking strategies, and cost-effective approaches to achieving five nines uptime.
Discover how OpenMetal’s strategically positioned data centers eliminate the “data tax” on globally distributed applications. Free east-west traffic between regions plus predictable 95th percentile bandwidth billing lets you architect for performance instead of cost avoidance, with typical savings of 30-60% versus public cloud.
US companies expanding into ASEAN face critical infrastructure decisions. OpenMetal’s Singapore-based private cloud eliminates colocation’s 6-12 month delays and public cloud’s escalating costs, offering quick deployment with predictable OpEx pricing for Southeast Asian market entry.
We’re thrilled to announce a significant step in our global journey: OpenMetal is officially launching a brand new data center location in Singapore!
Madrid, Spain based businesses benefit from hosting their applications on OpenMetal’s dedicated servers located in Amsterdam, Netherlands.
Nvidia is adapting to both AI and improvements needed in data center GPUs for non-AI work. View a comparison of their GPUs here.
Ready for a cost-efficient transition from AWS to your own data center? This blog covers everything your need to know including feature compatibility, team requirements for deployment and on-going management and insights into the initial deployment process.
Cloud has matured dramatically in the last 10 years. In the beginning there were only a few cloud deployment model options. Today, in 2024, there are many easy and fast ways to get cloud. Let’s go through different cloud deployment models that are mature and provide a quality experience when measured against solid cloud native requirements.
“Cloud Repatriation” has recently become a buzzword – and one that builds on the confusion of “cloud”. This term is typically used when talking about companies that are significantly overpaying for infrastructure from their public cloud of choice.



































