- Apple fights NYC over green apple logo
- IBM combines Systems i and p into greener Power System
- Harnessing datacenter heat for savings
- Event: Uptime, IT heavyweights to tackle data center power crisis
- The ROI of green IT
- Feds devise program to help datacenter operators cut energy waste, costs
- Xerox develops Sustainability Calculator for doc tech
- Carbon-measuring software evolves
- Greenpeace adding energy-consumption criteria to green rankings
- Make IT accountable for tech-related power bills
January 31, 2008 | Comments: (0)
Green features bloom in unexpected places
With organizations becoming increasingly keen on green, vendors are injecting green-oriented features into a predictable set of products. We've seen a server management suite, for example, groomed to cap the amount of energy a machine will consume at a given time.
But as the sustainable-tech movement gains momentum, more green-hued features are materializing in product types you might not necessarily expect -- and they're advancing, moving beyond measuring and reducing waste to tracking and reporting organizations' dread carbon footprints. Thus, customers are finding themselves with more options than ever for advancing down the green path and calculating their progress.
For example, PeopleCube, a provider of workplace and resource management technology, is padding its Resource Scheduler product line with some greenery. (Resource Scheduler allows users to reserve rooms, equipment, and services for meetings, training, and the like.) PeopleCube has announced plans to roll out tools in Resource Scheduler through which customers can remotely monitor and control the lighting and HVAC systems of any facility they oversee, down to an individual room -- so long as those systems are Web-services friendly. (Major vendors such as Honeywell do support that type of functionality in their more modern offerings.) Thus, a meeting room, floor, or the entire building's light and HVAC could be turned off remotely if not scheduled for use.
Resource Scheduler also announced some new reporting features that tie in to the green movement. One, for example, helps companies measure the total carbon footprint of a given facility and calculate cost savings relating to reduced energy consumption. There's also a telecommuting analysis report, aimed at helping companies calculate carbon emissions saved when employees telecommute instead of drive to the office. Similarly, a videoconference savings report illustrates cost, productivity, and carbon emissions saved when geographically dispersed participants conduct meetings via video teleconference instead of traveling to meet in person.
"The market is demanding efficient and environmentally sound workplaces," says Rebecca Wettemann, vice president of research at Nucleus Research, in a written statement. "PeopleCube is providing facility managers ... tools they need to achieve what their management and other constituents -- employees, customers, shareholders, or students -- are calling for in terms of eco-friendly, lower-cost operations."
Then there's BigFix, which has been steadily building on the Power Management module it released in late 2006. BigFix, of course, is an intelligent policy enforcement engine that employs agents to enforce policies on hardware throughout an organization. Similar to PC power-management offerings from Veridiem and 1E, BigFix's Power Management module lets admins set up and enforce policies to ensure that end-user systems are put into low-power mode when they're not in use, and are roused from sleep automatically, through wake-on-LAN technology, for patching. (Organizations can save upward of $75 per system annually if they implement PC power management.)
On top of that valuable functionality, BigFix has added graphical displays for calculating electricity, cost, and CO2 reductions from various customer-selected conservation policies.
Dave Robbins, president and CEO of BigFix, said that a power-management tool marks a natural evolution of the company's solution. "Though BigFix started out solving IT problems, our architecture is uniquely applicable to many critical problems – and no problem is more critical than the state of our environment," he said in a written statement.
There's no doubt in my mind that this trend will continue as more tech vendors unveil sparkling green features in their product lines. In some instances, such as those I discussed, the advances will add real value. But this trend also opens the door to plenty of green-washing opportunities. Some vendors might try to pass off what amounts to a simple energy-usage gauge as "evidence" that their eco-unfriendly wares are somehow green.
Ted Samson is a senior analyst at InfoWorld and author of the Sustainable IT blog. Subscribe to his free weekly Green Tech newsletter.
Posted by Ted Samson on January 31, 2008 03:00 AM
RATE THIS ARTICLE:
-

- COMMENTS
A decade from now will we look back on the "green era" and remember it as a) an important paradigm shift in the way businesses view themselves as global citizens, b) a good marketing ploy, or c) the way the socialist lobby suppressed America's economic prowess by demonizing energy use, the engine of economic might?
Posted by: Debra M at February 4, 2008 08:28 AMTOP STORIES
Hyperconnected users growingSteve Jobs to keynote WWDC
CSC settles kickbacks case
MS previews SMB software
What does HP-EDS really mean?
Mac Office 2008 SP1 released
HP buys EDS for $13.9 billion
Corporate IT spending slows
MS targets smartphone market
Sun to clarify JavaFX plan
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES

- Virtualization: A Step by Step Approach to Success
- Dialing up Agility with Business Transformation
- 5 Things You Need to Know About Storage Virtualization

- Is your smaller organization ready for High Availability?
- Is system maintenance doing more harm than good?
- Virtual Test Lab Automation: Manage development infrastructure





