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My daughter recently brought home from school a photocopy of the lyrics of Jack Johnson’s “The 3 R’s” (from the Curious George soundtrack), which encourage us to “Reduce, Reuse, Recycle”. This struck me as relevant in some of the recent discussions I have been having about Greenwashing in the Data Center.

 

A fair amount of our data center strategy deals with driving down costs. We’re trying to spend less money to deliver the same or better results. Along the way, we find opportunities to be green. While I would love to have more meetings that start out with the question of “what can we do to help the environment?” rather than “what can we do to cut costs?”, we do talk about both. This is somewhat similar to consumer-oriented eco-efforts, encouraging people to save the world while saving money: unplug electronic devices when they're not being used, replace your appliances with more energy-efficient ones, etc. I don't know of many people or organizations who wouldn't like to spend less money, and when we can help the environment at the same time it's win-win.

 

Which brings me back to the song lyrics. Our cost-cutting measures tend to be related to at least two of the three “R’s” – reducing what we consume, many times by reusing what we already have. I’ll spend my next few posts exploring this a bit further, giving some specific examples of our cost-savings initiatives that ultimately contribute to a greener data center and IT infrastructure.

 

Happy Earth Day...

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If you've attended any of the Intel Premier IT Professional events or if you have been following our Data Center blogs, you're no doubt aware that Intel is in the process of transforming our computing and data processing back end. We're moving from a sprawl of resources spread across over a hundred data centers to a much smaller footprint. We've been deploying grid computing and virtual servers to slow the rate of growth of our computing capacity. We're also changing our operations processes, applying disciplines that were originally developed for our factories to improve the way we manage our data centers. A little over a year into the project, some of our team (Uttam Shetty, Alan Ross, Brently Davis, and I) have put out a white paper to summarize our goals, focus areas, and preliminary results. We've uploaded the paper Transforming a Global Data Center Environmentas a resource, which you can read/download.

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I've posted to this blog a few times in the past, but my "day job" (Data Center Efficiency) has kept me away from blogging for longer than I'd like. My colleague Brently and I were recently in Folsom for meetings, and took some time out to talk about some of the key elements of our data center strategy: working horizontally rather than tailoring solutions for a particular business unit, giving transparent access to a global pool of resources, and improving data quality.


 

 


I'll plan to increase my posting frequency, using this blog as a forum to share some of the things that have worked for us (or that haven't worked) as we reduce our data center footprint. I'd like for this to become a conversation rather than a broadcast, so please let me know if you have any questions or would like more details on any specific part of this initiative.

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