HostColor has added 10 Gbps AMD EPYC dedicated servers in Amsterdam, expanding its bare-metal options in the metro with AMD Ryzen and AMD EPYC CPU configurations. The company is delivering the Amsterdam dedicated servers from three facilities: MainCubes AMS01 (Capronilaan 2, 1119 NR Schiphol-Rijk), Equinix AM4 (Science Park 610, Amsterdam), and an nLighten site (Koolhovenlaan 120, Schiphol-Rijk).
The Amsterdam bare-metal lineup includes AMD Ryzen-based platforms with Ryzen 9 9900X, Ryzen 9 7950X 3D, or Ryzen 9 9950X processors. AMD EPYC-based configurations include EPYC 7443P, EPYC 7543P, EPYC 9354P, EPYC 9274F, EPYC 9374F, EPYC 9275F, EPYC 9375F, EPYC 9474F, EPYC 9475F, EPYC 9575F, EPYC 9654, EPYC 9754, and EPYC 4564P.
Networking is built around 10-gigabit internet connection ports. For AMD processor-based dedicated servers and cloud infrastructure services delivered from MainCubes AMS01 and Equinix AM4, HostColor’s default model is metered data transfer, measured in terabytes per month. The company says customers can request an unmetered bandwidth model instead.
Provisioning time depends on stock and configuration. HostColor puts in-stock configurations at 8 to 48 hours after an order is placed, with some preconfigured services available in as little as four hours. Custom, on-demand bare-metal infrastructure can take up to 14 days to provision and deliver.
For operators and infrastructure teams, the practical takeaway is that 10 Gbps ports are becoming table stakes for bare metal used in storage-heavy workloads, replication, and high-throughput application stacks. But the metered-versus-unmetered choice matters operationally because it changes how you model sustained egress, backups, and inter-site data movement in monthly cost planning.
Separately, HostColor also described dedicated Data Storage IaaS offerings delivered from data centers across the US, Canada, Europe, Asia, and South America, including bare-metal data storage plans and customizable cloud data storage. For cloud data storage, the company offers metered transfer (terabytes per month) or unmetered bandwidth quotas starting at 250 Mbps and scaling up to 10 Gbps. HostColor also says it doesn’t charge for internet traffic, IOPS, DNS lookups, DNS zones, internet traffic zones, or technical support for infrastructure. FITS (“Free Infrastructure Technical Support”) covers core virtual network interface functionality, while the company characterizes its bare-metal and cloud data storage services as “Semi-Managed,” including server installation and configuration to customer Linux requirements, plus optional OS reinstalls and network configuration work.
Source: HostColor











