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  • tjcanning 5:46 pm on March 2, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Energy Star, , ,   

    Energy Star or Death Star? 


    The goals of the program are to give organizations a greater incentive to improve the energy efficiency of their data centers, and to give them a way to track the results of efficiency initiatives over time, said Alexandra Sullivan, an EPA program engineer who described the effort at a recent green IT conference.

    Data centers that participate in the EPA program will use an online tool that ranks their efficiency on a scale of 1 to 100. Those that score 75 or higher can request an audit from the EPA, which awards qualified organizations the Energy Star certification.

    If you are an Enterprise IT or Facilities person – is this a kiss of death? I mean – is another “thing” that you will now have to deal with? Maybe you’ve just got PUE figured out, either by manually doing some readings or a little sub-metering and/or wireless-networked sense points and you thought all was good. Nope – it’s time for a new thing that will require you to use an “on-line” tool to determine you’re ranking and then if you hit the magical 75 – you can request an audit! So – are you the kind of person who likes to request “audits”? I can’t remember the last time I requested an IRS audit – and somehow this seems just as painful.

    Let’s hope not. I mean the real deal here is to help folks benchmark their data centers – gather a level of visibility around usage/cost/efficiency and in the end reduce energy consumption, increase existing capacity while maintaining or increasing service reliability. Right?

    So I hope this process will be friction-less for the data center early-adopter. We need folks to embrace this program, gain benefits in realizing their current in-efficiencies and prove to the rest of the F5000 that it is possible to clean up the data center and do a good thing.

    Thought #1   It would be really interesting for the EPA to publish the top 500 Energy Star certified companies.

    Thought #2  It would be really interesting to only award federal business to companies in the 85+ score category.

    Energy Star is coming… please don’t let it be a Death Star and destroy or de-rail your greening efforts…

     
  • tjcanning 6:08 pm on March 1, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , ,   

    Sustainability Ranking. Where Are You? 

    Wow – my phone carrier ranks last! After being a loyal Verizon customer for so many years and so many phone bills – what gives? The TVR report states the following:

    The Tomorrow’s Value Rating of the world’s largest information and communications technology (ICT) companies shows that sustainability leaders such as Vodafone, Nokia, HP and France Telecom are developing products and services to support the world’s response to climate change. The results of the Rating reflect the broader trend of ICT companies showing sustainability leadership.

    However, while the sector continues to push best practice in sustainability innovation, there is considerable room for improvement in its management of its direct environmental impacts.

    Also interesting to note:

    Management of direct environmental impacts is a weak spot

    While the sector continues to push best practice in sustainability innovation, its management of its direct environmental impacts leaves room for improvement. For example, while most companies have set CO2 emissions targets, the majority are struggling to achieve significant reductions. Panasonic is a notable exception to this rule.

    So, how about looking at the Data Center folks?

     
  • tjcanning 5:56 pm on February 25, 2010 Permalink | Reply  

    Apple’s iDataCenter. Massive. 

    Need I say more?

     
  • tjcanning 5:53 pm on February 11, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , ,   

    Energy Star or Rock Star for Data Centers? 

    blog

    blog

    This movie requires Adobe Flash for playback.

    Energy Star for data centers is coming.

    The US Environmental Protection Agency is wrapping up work on an Energy Star program for data centers that it hopes to launch in June, EPA. So rather than wait for June – I decided to launch for own Rock Star initiative and post a video about the need for enterprise greening and highlighting some use cases to get folks thinking. Success comes in small steps they say…  so does any energy savings initiative. Becoming a Rock Star does as well – so since this is my first video – it’s a little shaky in spots, I shortened the clips, my Canadian “out” seems to pop in a few places.  But heck, just like Jason Bourne in the “Bourne Identity” – I can work on releasing some sequels from time to time and via video – share my thoughts on the market, the challenges and of course the hype. Make sure you select the HD option in the top right hand corner. I look better in HD. :-) Posting a video of yourself is kinda scary to be honest – especially when you self create it. Is this what it’s like creating a Green Business Case? Kinda scary? Maybe – which is why I think this necessary step seems to be the stumbling block for most enterprises I speak with.

    My video is short and sweet. “More is less”  – this is how I try to deal with everything these days. Maybe the use cases help you think a little about some “small steps” you could take within your organization. Hopefully my “trailer” help you see the big picture. If you have any video suggestions – I’m all ears. I hope to post some viral videos shortly on YouTube as a way to start to increase the awareness and need for data center efficiency. Stay tuned…

     
  • tjcanning 7:28 pm on February 8, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Data Center Pulse, GreenIT,   

    What Is The Data Center Stack? 

    Now I like this. I  mean I  r-e-a-l-l-y  like this! Now, you’d have to know a little about my background to appreciate those comments – so for those of you who don’t know me – me let me share a few glimpses into my mysterious past. Back in the hay day of .dotcom and software start-ups – my first entree into the software start up world was in the middleware space. And yes – it was all about having a stack and being able to complete with the likes of IBM, BEA, and others to own the software infrastructure within an organization. Why did companies want stacks? Well, they didn’t necessarily want a stack – they just wanted the capabilities of a stack to solve the  integration and interoperability challenges that were slowing down their businesses

    The more I look at current data center environments – the more I see the need for integration. Now don’t get flipped out – I am not saying someone needs to design an ESB (Enterprise Service Bus) or that SOA should finally arrive at the doorsteps of the data center. It has taken SOA (Service Oriented Architecture) a heck of a long time for IT to understand, expose and deliver these so desired “fined-grained services” so that composite applications could deliver that “WOW” factor to the business side of the enterprise and let those users realize a competitive and efficient business advantage.

    What does this stack look like? Is it a software stack?

    If you look at the stack – it’s a representation of all the “stuff” you need to worry about in the data center. Call it a blueprint or framework if you will. Data Center Blueprint 1.0! Now why do I like this? Because if the industry adopts and endorses a blueprint, framework or stack (you pick your favorite) then it will create a common language for vendors and customers to communicate. It also allows for the innovation and development of integration solutions to help weave together the various building blocks of the stack. From a vendor perspective – I would much rather share with a prospect “where” and “how” I fit into an architecture than to try and first understand/decipher 20 different customer created architectures.

    What’s missing in this diagram? API’s! Imagine if we could over time associate the various API’s for each of these blocks, both to expose the data and the associated metric for that block? Ya! now hat’s what I’m talking about!  – That would be a perfect world – wouldn’t Tom? Reality: This is tough – since you’ve got a mix of legacy and new – and some of that legacy is locked down tighter than Fort Knox and it ain’t going no where soon.  So yes – definite challenge. It has taken SOA the last 10 years to work its way across the IT application layer – could we ever see a common set of “Data Center Services”? A rich repository of all my power, environmental, server, storage etc… data and metrics -  all neatly exposed and available for application consumption? Can you see it? I can – but it is years away.

    The proposed framework is a step in the right direction. It could be the core building block stack for the data center. Adoption and endorsement determines fate in any type of effort towards standardization.

    Hats off to the Data Center Pulse guys! Good stuff!

     
  • tjcanning 6:17 pm on February 8, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , ,   

    What is Sustainability? 

    I keep hearing about sustainability – so I just had to pony up $200 bucks and hit the San Jose Value-Based Sustainability event the other week. It was put on by the folks at Executive Council. Mind you – I am not a fan of any event that starts at 8:00 in San Jose – 101 or 280 at that time is not what I would classify as a “value-add ride” – but I did manage to get there in time to catch some key presentations. Who was there?  It was the heavy hitters of the fortune world – companies such as PG&E, Autodesk, SAP, Microsoft, IBM, Coca-Cola, UPS, 1E, Verdiem, EnerNOC, and Stirling Energy.

    What is Sustainability? If you are a Googler like me – the first place you go today is to Wikipedia for education. The Wikipedia folks will tells you that:

    Sustainable business, or green business, is enterprise that has no negative impact on the global or local environment, community, society, or economy—a business that strives to meet the triple bottom line. Often, sustainable businesses have progressive environmental and human rights policies. In general, business is described as green if it matches the following four criteria:

    1. It incorporates principles of sustainability into each of its business decisions.[1]

    2. It supplies environmentally friendly products or services that replaces demand for nongreen products and/or services.[1]

    3. It is greener than traditional competition.[1]

    4. It has made an enduring commitment to environmental principles in its business operations.[1]

    Ok cool. I am down with that. This was the theme that was echoed at this event. I did find some posting quotes from the event on a cool site called Conference Bites. Let me share a few:

    “Metrics are still the holy grail in this (sustainability) space.”
    ~ Libby Reder, Head of Environmental Initiatives, eBay

    “We…need to get value by extracting it out of information, rather than out of the ground.”
    ~ Kathrin Winkler, VP of Sustainability, EMC

    I had a chance to briefly chat with Libby and Kathrin – it’s always refreshing to meet folks who are leaders in their respective spaces and who are also real and fun to chat with.

    The event was co-hosted by UPS – Bob Stoffel did a really nice job of sharing what sustainability really means within UPS – and as a long time UPS shipper – there is a large supply chain that must operate efficiently to keep those brown trucks rolling!

    How did I celebrate the mid morning event break – nothing better than a nice cold Coke!  Bryan Jacobs from Coca Cola (a fellow engineer I might add too) shared his thoughts on sustainability and of course over the course of the event -  I had to support his views by having multiple cokes on ice!

    There was a strong take away that I had from this event – and it was embedded in both Libby’s and Kathrin’s quotes. What was it? It was the word “Metrics”. If you want to do anything in the enterprise these days – you absolutely need to associate a metric with it. A metric tell you if you are wining, failing or somewhere in between when it comes to delivering on an initiative. It separates reality from vision. It separates execution from planning. I am going to start to hone in on metrics in the next couple of blog posts.

    A metric is only a number… so why is everyone is scared of them?

     
  • tjcanning 6:29 pm on January 7, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Carol Baroudi, , , Green IT For Dummies, ,   

    Green IT for Dummies 

    Happy 2010!

    If you are the kind of person who makes New Year’s resolutions – maybe you are thinking about being a better “green” person within your organization? The thing is – for most folks – just what does this really mean?

    I’ve become a big fan of simplicity and transparency. Both in sales process, sales execution and sales training. If you are trying to train yourself in something new – start with the simple stuff first!Case in point – this book which I was fortunate enough to receive a copy of from Carol Baroudi who you may recognize from the Aberdeen Group. Carol is a Green and Sustainability consultant – so she lives and breathes this stuff!

    I’m not that big a reader to be honest. I’m more of a scanner – so this book is good if you want to quickly get a grasp of what Green IT is also about and maybe some thoughts on how to drive these initiates within your organization.

    Part 3 of the book is titled “Greening the Data Center” – so I would draw your attention to this section and chapters:

    • Chapter 7: Laying the Foundation for Green Data Management
    • Chapter 8: Maximizing Data Center Efficiency
    • Chapter 9: Racking up Green Servers
    • Chapter 10: Cooling your Data Center
    • Chapter 11 Building a Green Storage System
    • Chapter 12: Grooming the Network for Green
    • Chapter 13: Using Virtualization

    Wow – you can quickly get the big picture as you read through these chapters of all the different aspects of the data center that “green” can influence.

    Cooling is the biggest cost in the data center – so chapter 10 has a section in “Benchmarking your Cooling System’s Efficiency” where we start to get into The Green Grid and PUE calculations.  It’s easy reading – and the sections are not designed to tire you out which is good!

    For anyone who is new to the notion of  “Greening the Enterprise Data Center” – this is a great book to help you get started. If you want to pick up a copy – just google it and the usual sources show up.  Thanks Carol for getting the word out!

     
  • tjcanning 3:44 pm on November 12, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , ,   

    Data Center Hype Cycle. Where are you? 

    HypeCycleSCALED

    OK. I have been sitting on this graph in my WordPress account for awhile now. Time to unleash it to the world! I’m not sure if it helps frame the current state of enterprise adoption or if it ties to the new 2012 movie which follows the end of the world! I’m used to Gartner Group hype cycles. I used to follow them for the software infrastructure space, integration, web 2.0 and basically a lot of things. Are they accurate? Well it depends on your definition of accuracy and what established reference point you might want to use. They certainly make for some great discussion points with a customer.

    If we dig down on the graph – we see their are 5 phases as best described by my favorite site Wikipedia.

    A hype cycle in Gartner’s interpretation comprises five phases:

    1. “Technology Trigger” — The first phase of a hype cycle is the “technology trigger” or breakthrough, product launch or other event that generates significant press and interest.
    2. “Peak of Inflated Expectations” — In the next phase, a frenzy of publicity typically generates over-enthusiasm and unrealistic expectations. There may be some successful applications of a technology, but there are typically more failures.
    3. “Trough of Disillusionment” — Technologies enter the “trough of disillusionment” because they fail to meet expectations and quickly become unfashionable. Consequently, the press usually abandons the topic and the technology.
    4. “Slope of Enlightenment” — Although the press may have stopped covering the technology, some businesses continue through the “slope of enlightenment” and experiment to understand the benefits and practical application of the technology.
    5. “Plateau of Productivity” — A technology reaches the “plateau of productivity” as the benefits of it become widely demonstrated and accepted. The technology becomes increasingly stable and evolves in second and third generations. The final height of the plateau varies according to whether the technology is broadly applicable or benefits only a niche market.

    Now that we all have a general understanding of the hype cycle phases – let look at how Gartner applies the hype cycle to the data center space. Here we go…

    As you can see, this graph is titled ” Data Center Power and Cooling Technologies” and has a heavy concentration of data points on the first slope of the “technology trigger” phase. We also see that “cooling management” and “power monitoring and management software” occur somewhere at the “peak of inflation” or a little further down the curve. As blue dots – the adoption period to mainstream is 5-10 years for cooling management (Wow! -now that too me seems way to long) and the white dots for monitoring are in the <less than 2 years. This I like.

    Why? Gartner is always ahead of the customer. I know this. I have lived this. If, according to this hype cycle, “power monitoring” is <2 years, then enterprises need to be investigating product, building business cases, deploying POC projects and basically starting to embrace this new technology  (I guess I should have used the word solution here… but you know what I mean). Some are. Some aren’t. It takes time and resources to bring something new in, get it deployed and showing value to the various stakeholder groups. In some enterprises this can be a real pain. Again, I know this, I have lived this. But, for those that do, you are tracking very well with the above hype cycle timing. Also – to me it’s like the Fram oil filter commercial – “You can pay me now or pay me later!” Any product that can help save you money – what would you want to wait to start investigating it value for your organization?

    The cycle is here. The data center map has been defined. Where are you in adoption and willingness to embrace and accelerate? Not all environments are the same, but the goals of driving energy efficiency should be the same and we all need to get started in some form or fashion.

    Is the data center hype cycle like the 2012 Myon calendar?  The death of your data center? Or could it be the creation of a new, green, energy efficient data center that is monitored and saves you real $$$. Don’t wait till December 21st to find out – get started now!

     
  • tjcanning 12:59 am on October 29, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , ,   

    SVLG Data Center Energy Summit – I was there! 

    svlgEverybody like a party right? Well I had the chance to attend the past SVLG event in Silicon Valley (where else?) hosted at the rocking NetApp campus. Nice digs! Super presenters and crowd.

    It was the Data Center Energy Summit and every seat in the room was taken and folks were even standing just to hear the “secret energy efficiency sauce” being shared!

    So how do you make sure everyone gets your message and knows who you are at an event like this? Esy – You go to BestBuy and purchase a massive 42″ LCD and have 12 Powerpoint slides that rotate very 5 seconds with simple messaging!

    You then make sure you are front stage of the event and just below a jumbo presentation screen. Wow – if you check my little picture with the red circle highlighted- I guess that is exactly what happened to me! Kinda like “The Perfect Storm” except everyone survives and comes home a hero!

    SVLG and NetApp did a bang up job for the event. Class act. Thanks everyone!

     
  • tjcanning 12:42 am on October 29, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Arch Rock, , , wireless sensors   

    Data Center Monitoring: A 2 minute Lesson 

    areo

    Let’s go quick, I’ve only got you for 2 minutes! From the hallways of the AFCOM Data Center World to the SVLG gymnasium of Netapp – the buzz is all about wireless sensors in the data center! It’s really about time that this technology got out and into the capable hands of every facilities or data center manager – I mean we measure everything else in the enterprise today – how can it possibly be that the data center’s excessive  energy consumption has gone on for so long without scrutiny. I scratch my head in wonder…

    Wireless sensors work really well to help folks quickly figure out their data center environments and bring sense to simple power and cooling challenges. The sensors are inexpensive, deployment is a snap ( hey Ma, look no wires!)  and the application is rich and intelligent. Rather than I try and explain this – let me cut/paste somethig an analyst wrote – very detailed but arther simplistic. I like it.

     

    How Energy Optimizer Works in the Data Center

    AREO-DC works by deploying wireless sensors to measure electrical, thermal, flow and pressure conditions on power circuits, server racks, computer-room air conditioners (CRACs) or air handlers (CRAHs), chillers and underneath the raised computer-room floor. The sensed data is then transmitted via wireless sensor networks to a graphical, multi-window dashboard that shows the electricity load (and associated utility rate-adjusted spend rate) of various equipment, electricity usage by physical or functional area over user-selected time intervals; temperature and humidity data from CRACs, CRAHs, server racks and chillers over time; chiller water-flow rates; “heat maps” superimposed on a floor plan; and key performance indicators such as the Green Grid organization’s Power Usage Effectiveness (PUE) Level 3 standard.

    From the AREO-DC dashboard, users can drill down to specific data centers and specific racks within a data center, and bring up side-by-side views of various factors, such as energy usage vis-à-vis indoor and/or outdoor temperature. Alerts can be generated when heat- and energy-use thresholds or user-defined financial thresholds are exceeded.

     

    Now this my friends sounds like a winner. There is nothing wrong with saving money. Ask Jim Cramer if you don’t believe me.

     
  • tjcanning 2:57 pm on October 9, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: ,   

    Hydroelectricty: Dam it! 

    dam

    Just saw a posting that Aditi Justin wrote on VMware’s new data center. I know this is a second posting on Vmware, and even though it crashes on my mac at times, I am going to give them a second kudo’s and highlight this cool announcement. I grew up near a hydroelectric dam – so maybe it was the pic that really caught my eye.

    VMware, the global leader in virtualization solutions, announced the opening of a new green IT datacenter yesterday. Located in East Wenatchee, Washington, the new center will be developed using cutting-edge technology with special attention on maximizing the use of VMware virtualization software. The company is looking forward to attain an ambitions PUE figure and has entered the facility for a LEED Platinum certification by the US Green Building Council.

    The new data center is solely powered by hydroelectric energy and maximizes use of airside economization or free cooling. A hot- and cold-aisle containment is included in the design so that the air-handling equipment at the facility can be further optimized. It is estimated that expects airside economizers will bring down the air-conditioning usage by 50-75 percent. The company’s projects, which reduce the power consumption due to shorter air-compressor runtimes, will save $500,000 annually.

    Very cool. Very hip.

     
  • tjcanning 5:43 pm on September 25, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags:   

    The 4 Minute Data Center. VMworld 2009 

    These video’s are always cool! I had a pass to attend but unfortunately was so busy I could not make it down there. I am sure I missed meeting some interesting folks and of course old friends. Next year.

    And oh ya, it will only be a 3 minute video next year due to Moore’s law.

     
  • tjcanning 9:16 am on September 18, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , ,   

    Dear Data Center, The MAN is Coming! 

    This blog is going heavy metal today! Warning: Stop reading now if you are not a metal fan! I have to post this as I thought it just fit so well. Let me explain…

    I had just finished reading a Mike Manos post on the fact the ‘MAN’ is coming…

    “Data center managers might not understand that once the legislation passes, in whichever form, they’ll be a significant contributor to carbon emissions and will fall under reporting requirements,” says Mike Manos, senior vice president of technical services at Digital Realty Trust, “I don’t think many data center managers see that coming or are aware of that.”

    Excellent post Mike! I see this an accelerator for data center optimization and the need for Facilities and IT to take action. Right? So just after reading this – I ended up going for a quick run to burn off some steam. I load my ipod shuffle from about 50gb of euro rock metal house music to help me run.. Low and behold – a 1996 Motorhead tune called “Broken” comes on and as I listen to the lyrics – it’s like a perfect match to the thoughts I have on Mike’s post! Check this out:

    You don’t know the trouble you’re in
    Linvin’ in paradise, livin’ in sin
    You better watch out baby one of these days
    Another man coming gonna change your ways

    Broken, broken truth must be spoken
    Can we be responsible, is someone keeping score
    Broken, broken when all guns are smoking
    Do you want to die then, according to the law
    Sunshine, moonshine, fire & flood
    Death come hungry to your neighbourhood
    You better watch out baby, one of these nights
    Somebody coming to shoot out your lights

    You can google the rest of the words but they really ring true to how most data centers are running today. Broken! Everyone is living in paradise without a care in the world for efficiency because no one is watching the hen house! Well this living in sin might come to an end if the Waxman-Markey energy cap-and-trade bill passes! Why?

    “But when these initiatives pass, you’ll find yourself in a situation where you’re not structured for reporting or efficiency because facilities doesn’t get what you can do from a technology point to optimize the data center, and the data center managers don’t see power bills to understand where they’ll have to go to meet their energy use targets,” he adds.

    Wow! This sounds like a SOX compliance/governance wave all over again!  I love regulations. It makes customers take action and it allow vendors to solve problems and make customer happy. Its a win-win!

    Now that is music to my ears!

     
  • tjcanning 5:07 pm on September 1, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , ,   

    It’s Costs Money to Be Cool! 

    NVIDIAdatacenterenergycosts

    Just came across the graphic which I thought was a great visual to show the cost break down in the dc. Cooling costs are approximately 40% for this customer – Nvidia. This is real. 40% is a big number – Maybe time to check out ASHRAE and start saving money?

     
  • tjcanning 1:28 am on August 28, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , ,   

    Data Center Efficiency: Facilities Wins! 

    poll

    The results are in and Facilities won! Congratulations!

    So here is the deal – if you are going into the Green IT space, specifically data center, it appears that Facilities and following the almighty dollar (Hello Mr. CFO in 2nd place) is the place to focus. My little twtpoll experiment – using the notion of crowd-sourcing and seeking the wisdom of the audience – would lead us to believe that Facilities at 41% and the CFO at 27% are the folks that really care about energy efficiency in the data center. Do you agree? Do I agree?

    Well, I have  to say that over the past few weeks I’ve been reaching out to folks, at different levels and across different types of organizations. Hey – maybe you’re reading this and you gotten a vm from me! Ha – gotta love pure 100% cold calling! Ask me if I like pain? Well – it’s not that tough when you remember that:

    Hey – this is my planet too! So if you guys want to waste energy – then I got an issue and you need to hear me out!

    Back to the poll… Greening the data center is definitely new for some folks. And for some – new things represent a big challenge. I had an interesting conversation the other day with a energy expert at a big organization (sorry – I don’t drop names) and he was quick to validate the diferent “rate of change” that IT and Facilities live in. If you’re in IT – it’s all about server refresh, get faster stuff, make stuff smaller, add more blinking lights to stuff and basically everyone lives and embraces “change”. It’s like a hit of acid. Compare that to Facilities and it’s like “what really changes there?” Not so much right? It’s not like I want to rip and replace CRAH’s every 6 months, I can’t virtualize jack so I’m missing that fun, my chiller just makes alot of noise and weighs 8 tons – so I ain’t touching that! So, it’s a change and a challenge to all of a sudden drop this whole “Green Data Center” on the lap of Facilities and expect that everyone is willing to embrace the notion and action it immediately in their environment. The folks that can and do – Hats off! The folks that haven’t quite engaged – maybe experiment with small steps?  Based on the poll – we know you care!

    Question – what happened to IT in this poll? 1 lousy vote?  Comments please!

     
  • tjcanning 3:44 pm on August 19, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags:   

    Inside the Goggle Data Center 

    Now this is a cool. Need I say more?

     
  • tjcanning 9:32 am on August 9, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: American Data Center, , , ,   

    The American Data Center Contest! 

    contestIf you think you’ve got the right stuff – then I am extending an open invitation to participate in this season’s “American Data Center” contest! I’m sure everyone is familiar with American Idol, so in a similar fashion, I am looking for the most wannabe energy conscious enterprise data center to step forward and take stage!

    Call me crazy, but let me describe the contest. I don’t think anything like this has ever done before, but then again, if you told me 5 years ago I would be tweeting 140 characters – I would of called you crazy!

    Contest Details:

    • Goal: Find the best candidate enterprise data center and team for a real world energy usage pilot
    • The Rules: You need to be serious about saving energy and have a enterprise data center that could use some efficiency gains
    • The Challenge: Be willing to instrument your data center and collect power and cooling data with non-invasive sensors
    • My Commitment: I’ll invest the time, instrumentation, and energy savings expertise to make you a corporate rock star!
    • Your Commitment: Your time, data center and current energy challenges. Maybe ASHRAE has you thinking?
    • The Fear: You are going to measure real power, cooling and gain visibility into your data center environment. Measurement creates fear in some people. It’s like stage fright. You’ll need to overcome this initial fear and be adventuresome. You also need to like math – since we’re going to be doing some calculations!
    • The Reward: Visibility and real data that you can action and use to increase your power efficiency. That means “YOU WILL SAVE MONEY!!!”
    • Sign Up: Contact me on Linkedin or send an email to discuss further. (both are listed in the top RHS of my blog too)

    Super Stars Only!

    If you are real serious and have the interest, then I’d like to explore adding a twist of social media to this contest. I do understand enterprise constraints concerning PID’s, NDA’s etc – but if you could share some basic findings or general best practices – this would be helpful to others. Enterprises need good examples and stories to sell upper management. As an example, imagine a YouTube channel that hosts a weekly 1-2 minute video on what we are doing, experiencing and learning. Nothing complicated, raw format that just shares our adventure. Remember – this is about something good – saving energy and letting others know that there are things they can do in their data center. Good PR and good corporate thought leadership is what I am talking about!

    Btw…the interaction and relationship between customer/vendor is changing. If you follow Social Media, Enterprise 2.0 or Sales 2.0 – collaboration and transparency are the new trends to adopt. This contest represents a step in that direction and I hope you appreciate my approach in looking for a great data center candidate to work with.

    Reach me directly to discuss further!

     
  • tjcanning 5:21 pm on August 6, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , ,   

    dilbert

    The Lighter Side of Data Center Cooling…

    This is classic. If Dilbert is writing about data center cooling and the melting down of data centers – then I hope a lot of folks start to understand the seriousness of saving energy in their data centers! Data Center efficiency should be fun. Get started making a change!

     
  • tjcanning 8:38 am on August 3, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: CFO, CIO, , ,   

    Who Cares About Data Center Efficiency? 

    pollThis the question I ask and it shall be the community that helps answer this question! I thought it might be interesting to see what views the folks in twitter universe have on this topic. Seems like there is a lot of talk these days around data center energy savings – but talk is cheap. Who really cares and who can take action? Let’s go to the people and find out!

    I’m using Twtpoll for this exercise. It’s a cool little on-line twitter poll application that shows up branded (just like my twitter profile). You can cast your vote and also view results at http://twtpoll.com/jr3ddd

    It’s going to run for a week and then we’ll see what new insights we have on this topic. Feel free to re-tweet …enjoy!

     
  • tjcanning 1:03 pm on July 29, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , ,   

    ASHRAE_Extended_Environmental_Envelope_Final_Aug_1_2008-1-1

    ASHRAE. Enjoy Summer.

    If you thought your data center was just as cold as San Francisco in the summer, that might just be about to change. ASHRAE, which stands for “The American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers” has some new recommendations for all you cost conscious data center folks!

    “It’s ok to run a little warmer! I say, it’s ok to run a little warmer!!”

    Every data center I have ever been in has been cold, noisy, and pretty much a place to get software installed, hardware plugged in, and then get the heck out of there and have the rest of the meeting where it is warm and quiet. ASHRAE is a game changer and causing lots of interesting articles to pop up all over the place.

    So what do you need to know about ASHRAE?

    The inlet air temp range has been updated to reflect modern times. From ASHRAE’s 2008 Extended Environment Envelope document Page 1. Here’s the deal:

    These recommended conditions as well as the allowable conditions refer to the inlet air entering the datacom equipment. Specifically it lists for data centers in the ASHRAE classes 1 and 2, a recommended environment range of 20 to 25 degrees C and a relative humidity (RH) range of 40-55%

    Basically – you don’t need to freeze the data center like an ice cube anymore and you can start to evaluate a higher operating environment. It does not mean you go change all the set points over night and start cooking everything like a Weatherford fired BBQ. Naw.. you need ot be able to understand what effect these neds ranges will have and be able to plan accordingly if you plan to adopt these new recommendations. Things to consider:

    • What is my current baseline?
    • How can I measure it if I don’t?
    • How can I visualize the effects of increased temperature?
    • How do I ensure I don’t create hot spots
    • How can I adjust/refine set points to optimize?
    • Can I associate changes to OpEx expenses and show an ROI?

    It’s like a new opportunity is present with ASHRAE to determine and define a new operating environment that your data center can safely operate in, and but reducing the draws on cooling – be able to save money in the process. Makes sense to me. Of course, raising inlet temp, and based on delta T, the idea is not to be cooking the hot aisle beyond control or containment. You still need to be able to have humans survive a trip or perform work  in the data center. ASHRAE does not apply to humans.

    Are you a fan of ASHRAE’s new recommendations? Have you taken any action to realize an ROI based on these new ranges?

    Tom
    Fan of ASHRAE

     
    • vburke 8:26 pm on August 16, 2009 Permalink | Reply

      Spot on on the human factor of the hot aisle, especially if you’ve got great hot aisle containment.

      Vern

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