Being a Minnesota native, I can tell you that while it is indeed cold, this is 
nothing new i the Great White North :)  I am amaze a how consistently the media 
overplays the severity of Midwest cold weather as some kind of unique 
phenomenon. They amplify this by reporting the wind-chill factor, which is the 
“what it feels like” equivalent in a cold and windy environment. But equipment 
feels nothing, so windchill is irrelevant.

For example, Minneapolis is -20F, but the news media instead reports “-60F wind 
chill”, which, while dramatic, is not meaningful for most purposes. I grew up 
in Minnesota with -30F and lower quite common, and we walked to school in those 
temperatures. You just have to dress well. Minneapolis is paved with tunnels 
and heated skyways to eliminate most outdoor walking downtown.

As far as networks go, none of the ISPs I know of do anything different than 
anywhere else in the country. Everyone has backup power. It’s already common 
practice everywhere to exploit cooler winter ambient temperatures to reduce 
HVAC requirements, so that’s not new either. But it gets as hot in the Midwest 
in our summer as it is in SA for you now, so everyone must still build out HVAC 
capacity to cover the hottest days.

 -mel beckman

On Jan 30, 2019, at 8:40 AM, Mark Tinka 
<mark.ti...@seacom.mu<mailto:mark.ti...@seacom.mu>> wrote:

For anyone running IP networks in the Midwest, are you having to do anything 
special to keep your networks up?

For the data centres, is this cold front a chance to reduce air conditioning 
costs, or is it actually straining the infrastructure?

I'm curious, from a +27-degree C summer's day here in Johannesburg.

Mark.

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