10 IT Power-Saving Myths Debunked
snydeq writes "InfoWorld examines 10 power-saving assumptions IT has been operating under in its quest to rein in energy costs vs. the permanent energy crisis. Under scrutiny, most such assumptions wither. From true CPU efficiency, to the life span effect of power-down frequency on servers, to SSD power consumption, to switching to DC in the datacenter, get the facts before setting your IT energy strategy."
I'm of the school that thinks "debunking" involves some kind of comprehensive stats or numbers or evidence weight against strongly held opinions.
This article is basically a verbose version of the "nuh uh" argument.
It's not a bad article.. but I would hardly call this "debunking".
And I totally disagree on point #2 .. maybe having _all_ your extra servers always on is bad.. but if load peaks there is no _way_ someone should be waiting while a system boots.
Myth No. 6: A notebook doesn't use any power when it's suspended or sleeping. USB devices charge from the notebook's AC adapter. Fact: Sleep (in Vista) or Hibernate mode in XP saves the state of the system to RAM and then maintains the RAM image even though the rest of the system is powered down. Suspend saves the state of the system to hard disk, which reduces the boot time greatly and allows the system to be shut down. Sleeping continues to draw a small amount of power, between 1 and 3 watts, even though the system appears to be inactive. By comparison, Suspend draws less than 1 watt. Even over the course of a year, this difference is probably negligible.
um... Hibernate != Sleep. Hibernate in XP saves the RAM to the Hard Drive, and powers off. Suspend keeps RAM powered....
The above comments are not guaranteed to make sense to anyone other than the author...
You need to keep them amused while they're waiting. Show them some nice pictures of kittens. Or some pr0n.
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
I lock my PC at the evening and turn off my monitor. Shutting down takes 5 minutes. Starting up takes 15 minutes. Just checked those time this morning to talk about it to IT. This does not include logging into the remote system with Citrix that takes another 10 minutes.
So the company has a choice.
1) Pay me (and everybody else in the company) 20 minutes
2) Pay the electricity for not turning of the PC
3) Find a solution that makes it possible to do all of this faster.
Oh. The only reason we use Citrix is to run Outlook in it.
Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
Link to 1 page version. Anonymous so as not to be a karma whore.
Myth No. 3: The power rating (in watts) of a CPU is a simple measurement of the system's efficiency.
Fact: Efficiency is measured in percentage of power converted, which can range from 50 to 90 percent or more. The AC power not converted to DC is lost as heat...Unfortunately, it's often difficult to tell the efficiency of a power supply, and many manufacturers don't publish the number.
I'm not sold on taking advice who doesn't understand the difference between the wattage rating of a CPU and the wattage rating of the power supply. They're completely different components.
Don't know about this but when someone gets confused about simply definitions, I start to wonder. I don't know if I can really trust what is "myth" or "fact". Or did MS redefine what hibernate and suspend, because that is what it is "in Vista".
"Sleep (in Vista) or Hibernate mode in XP saves the state of the system to RAM and then maintains the RAM image even though the rest of the system is powered down. Suspend saves the state of the system to hard disk"
Wiki http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hibernate_(OS_feature)
"Hibernate is a feature seen in many operating systems where the contents of RAM is written to non-volatile storage, such as the hard disk "
Sorry for the thread hijack, but I decided to post this link as soon as I saw the links to all 4 pages of the top 10 list.
http://www.infoworld.com/archives/emailPrint.jsp?R=printThis&A=/article/08/10/06/40TC-power-myths_1.html
He's getting rather old, but he's a good mouse.
Taking ten suppositions and making suppositions about those suppositions (I'm getting dizzy) is not debunking. All I see here is lots of questionable, completely unattributed information. For example: "The average 17-inch LCD monitor consumes 35 watts of electricity". Really? Where did this information come from? Did you pull this information from the glossy for a 17" monitor? Did you just test your monitor? Did you test a large sample of monitor's here? Did you pull this information from a study? Out of your ass?
We have a similar problem here that I've not been allowed to fix yet.
The employees typically turn on their computers and then LEAVE THE OFFICE to get Starbucks coffee or whatever. A 10 minute wait turns into 30 minutes of non-productivity.
The computers should be the same as the phones. Instant on - any time - every time.
Turning off your computer is always a good time to give the hamsters food and water, lets them rest, so in the morning your computer will be nice and fast. If it takes parents computer 15 minutes, his hamster need less weight
Go go Gadget Nailgun!
Did the definitions of 'fact' and 'debunk' change recently? Every 'myth' listed has 'fact' under it proving it is true. According to my good friend Mr. Webster this is called 'confirmation.'
If you have a shit system that's really slow and badly written display the following:
"The sub-optimal response you are experiencing will soon be resolved as we are utilising quantum replicators to produce more server hardware for your request. Once complete we will travel back in time and resubmit your request. Thank you for using One-Born-Every-Minute hosting. Have a nice day."
(Speaking from experience - different text, same message).
Genesis 1:32 And God typed
... something like monitoring system usage and bringing additional boxes up when usage hits something like 80%?
And then suspending boxes when usage drops down to 10%?
All in all, trying to maintain a level 50% utilization level? Maybe with the utilization level setting being an option that the sysadmin could change?
I'd recommend you patent that idea.
1. Spinning up and down hard drives: as discussed in plenty of places, including here on /. I believe, you can dramatically reduce the life of drives when you cycle them due to mechanical wear-and-tear. Laptop drives are designed for a lot more cycles because they're intended for this, but if you do it constantly even they'll die sooner or later. Server and desktop drives, OTOH, will die MUCH sooner. Is it really worth some extra power in a server farm in exchange for dying drives and their associated cost, including the increased possibility of data loss?
2. LCD Backlighting: Same as above--cycling power on any kind of discharge lamp dramatically reduces its life. And while LED backlighting is VERY efficient, AFAIK there are still major issues with color rendering--if there weren't, we'd be replacing regular lighting with them left and right. There's also the cost problem, particularly with the looming major shortage of gallium and indium. I think the only reason people don't talk about it more on laptops is because they're considered to have such a limited life expectancy since they're not expandable; now that desktop monitors are becoming more ubiquitous, I think we'll be seeing more talk about it.
3. SSDs: Their disadvantages have been talked to death here and elsewhere.
Mike
Why is using batteries, capacitors, or memory cells not considered power savers?
Isn't that their purpose...
(ignore the technicality of how most batteries are just an reaction generating power vs saving power)
Microsoft's Windows Messenger (MSN Messenger, Live Messenger... whatever they call it these days) Group wrote an awesome abstract of how they cycle servers on & off to handle the load while saving power.
Now, for reasons pointed out in other comments, TFA from Infoworld is a mix of good info and horseshit.
SIG: HUP
Myth #2 suggests making your customers wait. That might work in super-mega-corporate land where your customers are literally married to you and queues in Tech Support are "profitable."
I would *deserve* to be fired if I made a customer wait. Of course, that sense of urgency doesn't work in super-mega-corporate entities either.
The myth about going to DC to be more efficient is painful too. If a manager in a workplace would entertain a crackpot ideas like that, I'd leave.
http://www.maxineudall.com/2010/02/should-economists-be-sued-for-malpractice.html
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Suspend saves the state of the system to hard disk, which reduces the boot time greatly and allows the system to be shut down. Sleeping continues to draw a small amount of power, between 1 and 3 watts, even though the system appears to be inactive. By comparison, Suspend draws less than 1 watt. Even over the course of a year, this difference is probably negligible.
I though "suspend to disk" and "hibernate" were synonyms. A suspended computer shouldn't draw any more power than a computer that's turned off, because a suspended computer is off: you can pull AC and battery, ship it to Patagonia, plug it back in again, boot it from the hibernate image, and it shouldn't be able to tell it hadn't been on power the whole time.
Or is there some third level of "sleep" they're talking about here?
1. Powering a computer or server up and down limits its life span.
True. Computers contain mechanical components which are subjected to increased stress on power up. Whether that limits the life span so much that the computer fails before it has become obsolete is another question. Fact: Most electronics die on power up.
2. It takes too long to cold-start servers to react to spikes in demand. If customers are made to wait, they'll go elsewhere.
True. Not only will you annoy your users if they have to wait for more servers to be brought up, you'll also need more servers to handle the severe spike when the waiting customers all want to access the servers at the same time. If you expect spikes, have the hardware ready (or even out the load in a virtualized environment.)
3. The power rating (in watts) of a CPU is a simple measurement of the system's efficiency.
Well, there's nothing to debunk here. That's just stupid.
4. It's better to pack one big server with all the RAM, CPUs, and peripherals it can hold rather than to use multiple smaller servers.
It usually is, especially if you use components with low idle power consumption. Unless you really oversize it, the power savings from using fewer PSUs alone is worth it.
5. LCD monitors use a trivial amount of power, so you might as well leave them on. Their colors and backlight brightness improve with warm-up time.
LCD monitors certainly use non-negligible amounts of power, but their colors do change slightly during warm-up. The power savings from turning a display off do not outweigh the cost of a person waiting for the display to warm up.
6. A notebook doesn't use any power when it's suspended or sleeping. USB devices charge from the notebook's AC adapter.
The terminology is sloppy. Suspend to disk (hibernation) uses exactly as much energy as Off. Sleep ("Suspend to RAM") uses a little more. USB devices to charge from the USB port which is indeed powered by the notebook's AC adapter. Cheap PSU bricks use power even when the device doesn't draw any.
7. Notebook batteries just wear out. There's not much you can do to make them last longer.
"Many laptops with nickel-cadmium batteries.." Please! There is no such thing. You'd be hard-pressed to find a notebook with NiMH batteries. LiIon batteries do just wear out, but the rate depends on how they're used. Even under best usage conditions, they don't last much longer than 3 years.
8. Flash SSDs (solid-state drives) reduce the amount of power consumed by a laptop.
True. It does not depend on the application either. All benchmarks which have found different results where methodically flawed.
9. Going to DC power will inevitably save energy.
That's just stupid. Nobody believes that you don't need to know what you're doing when it comes to power supply engineering.
10. You're bound to save money by rushing out and buying the most energy-efficient equipment as soon as possible.
That's just stupid, period.
My favourite story (or urban legend) is when an employee came in to an IT shop on the weekend and shut down all of the A/C cooling units for the Data Centre. He claimed that he was "going 'Green' and saving power" because "...all of those computers in that room have their own fans." I'm pretty sure he was let go after that...or promoted to management.
Never send a Monster to do the work of an Evil Scientist.
That's a really bad article. Wow, worse then anything I remember them writing before.
Yeeeeeaaaaaahhhhh, LED backlit LCD monitors run in the $1,500+ range. Soooo if I save $10-$40 per year, I'll break even in 30 to 120 years. The mind boggles.
Coding with assembly is like playing with Legos. Coding an application in assembly is like building a car with Legos.
Out-right potentially wrong: no one cares if a customer is made to wait for a server to boot to get served. That's not a generalization to be made lightly... It is true, though, that suspend-to-ram has not received the attention it deserves in the data center. A great deal of server-class systems and options are not designed to cope with suspend-to-ram, and thus you must be careful banking on this. The industry should correct it, but a facility can't bank on it yet (just put pressure on your vendors to make it so...)
Straw-man: A supposed 'myth' that leaving on LCD monitors is fine for energy savings, with the remarkable clarification that being off saves more power... Who would have thought.
Other straw-man: You will unconditionally save money by rapid upgrades to the latest efficient technology. I don't think anyone is foolish enough to think compulsively following any technical treadmill will lead to any overall financial gain..
XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Probably the biggest and most annoying/disrupting power saving myth is Daylight Savings Time. Every year, the power companies announce that they don't notice any change whatsoever in power consumption.
Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
Sorry, It's just not worth the pain. Boot to RAM.
You just set high and low load thresholds for server on/off. And a load balancer which simply adds the new server to the server pool when it notices it's there, removes them when it's gone. So no need to try to predict stuff.
5 seconds or 3 minutes, the server boot times are largely irrelevant. If you think you're going to handle a slashdotting you are mistaken, you can't handle oneoff events this way. You would have to go from 1 to 100 servers and connections in 5 seconds.
What it can do is grow really quickly if a service becomes very popular very quickly, or reduce your datacenter costs if it's typically used only 9-5. Or even, dual purpose processing. Servers do X from 9-17 and Y from 15-20.
Deleted
In my latest batch order of servers (20 x 1U machines) I've got a config made up of: - intel xeon quadcore X3320 @ 2.5Ghz. These are the "efficient intel cores) - 4 x 2GB unbuffered ECC memory - 3ware 9690SA in RAID-10 with - 4 x Seagate SATA 500GB es.2 drives - high efficiency 280Watt PS while I haven't plugged them directly into a kilowatt meter, the first one I plugged into my metered APC unit showed it using .7amps at idle. Compared with some large honking 2U's with about double the power (2 x quadcores, 16gigs memory, 6 disks), these 1U systems use less than half the power rating as those larger machines.
Overall this has been a big win in datacenter cost savings for our 20amp circuits which we get charged for monthly. I can get a bunch more machines on a single circuit.
That list of myths debunked seems pretty sensible, even in details that run counter to conventional wisdom. But even though the list properly cautions several times against how most any equipment left plugged in will still drain power while doing nothing useful (infinitely bad efficiency), the article still makes an inefficienty mistake:
Over the course of a year, 2 unnecessary watts is 17.532 unnecessary KWh. Sure, that's only about $1.75 at about $0.10:KWh. But that's for each device. At home, in addition to sleeping computers, there's dozens of devices with AC adapters wasting watts most of the day (and night), which is possibly hundreds of dollars wasted. In offices and datacenters, possibly thousands to hundreds of thousands of dollars a year wasted. And each KWh means loads of extra Greenhouse CO2 unnecessarily pumped into the sky, even if it's (still) cheap to so recklessly pollute.
Which is what the One Watt Initiative is designed to minimize. The US government has joined the global efficiency organization, mandating purchases of equipment that consumes no more than 1 watt in standby mode. Whatever the global impact of 3W wasted in standby can be cut by 2/3 if switching to 1W.
In the short run, that makes energy bills lower (and, by saving heat from standby devices, further lowers energy costs due to less required cooling). In the long run, we've got more fuel and intact climate left to work with - and that stuff just costs way too much to replace when it runs out.
--
make install -not war
Google developed their own power supply, and open-sourced the hardware, saying it saves them tons of energy and the rest of the world should use it. Mind you, it is DC, and it means a total DC data center, but really that isn't a bad idea.
Virtualization is also the way to go to save power. Fewer servers.
http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
At one facility where I worked, a manager came in on a Saturday and found all the A/C in the building was on. Of course it was. It was almost 100 degrees outside. To save money, he hunted down every thermostat in the building and turned them off. There was no temperature monitoring. The servers in the top of the racks took it in the shorts. Almost every server in the machine room developed reliability issues and had to be replaced over the next year. But, because the manager was trying to do the right thing, and his heart was pure, he was only told he didn't need to worry about the A/C on weekends anymore.
Why, without your clothes, you're naked, Miss Dudley!
Put articles on a single web page, instead of forcing me to click through three different "Next" links in order to get through an entire article. I understand if the article is one of those 5000 word New Yorker extended expositions, but I absolutely hate this trend in turning already short articles into even shorter multi-page articles. Single-page articles save energy, as well as my attention and patience.
Turning on Roaming profiles and having a lot of crap on the desktop will affec this as well.
Tip number seven talks about battery conservation in LiIon vs. NiCd batteries. Um, laptops haven't used NiCd's in years. Their predecessors, NiMH hasn't been used in laptops in quite a while either.
Can you even buy NiCd's anymore, for any device? I can't remember the last time I saw them in an electronics store.
SirWired
The employees typically turn on their computers and then LEAVE THE OFFICE to get Starbucks coffee or whatever. A 10 minute wait turns into 30 minutes of non-productivity.
Or get a Mac. Although it you shouldn't need to go that extreme, one feature I have seen on Macs is the ability to auto boot at a certain specified time. If you know its going to take 10 minutes to be ready for use then get it to boot 10 minutes before your normal arrival time. The only question I have now is whether this feature is available in any non-Apple branded computers, and configurable via MS-Windows or Vista?
See the "Schedule Sleep or Shut Down" section at: http://support.apple.com/kb/HT2490?viewlocale=en_US
Jumpstart the tartan drive.
Intel recently did a study on how datacenters can be cooled using air-side economizers, saving up to 67 percent in energy costs on a 10MW room. This was unthinkable even a couple years ago but modern systems can handle heat a lot better so you are bound to realize some savings by bumping the temps up to 85-90 degrees.
Well I live in Canada, and most people I know use electric heating. Yes, central electric heating is great, and actually cheaper than oil around here. (Montreal area)
Putting aside the fact that burning hundred-dollar bills is a cheaper source of heat than oil these days, are you sure you're not talking about heat pumps (air conditioners that can run "backwards"?)
Heat pumps are by far the most efficient way to warm a building using electricity; everyone I know who uses "electric heat" actually has a heat pump that will switch over to resistance heat only as a backup.
Well I live in Canada, and most people I know use electric heating...(Montreal area)
To be fair, when snowraver1 said 'Canada', I think he actually was referring to Alan Fotheringham's 'TROC'(The Rest Of Canada), i.e., the unwashed masses outside of the 401 corridor.
Here in Alberta, as in much of western TROC, it's good old natural gas.
db
I am literally 3000 tokens away from the chaotic crossbow --Stephen
I remember using a Watts-Up meter on my 19' CRT a while back. When it went into power-saving mode (turning off the 'yoke', I think), it used under a watt of power. While technically true per the article that it will still use power until its unplugged, at that rate, ~30 systems set to put the monitor into power-saving mode would use the power of the single system where the employee forgot to enable it. At that point, I'd start looking elsewhere for power savings. Plus, you get the neat ka-bloing sound when you tap Shift to wake it up.
All the CRTs have built-in power supplies, unlike many external-transformer based LCDs nowadays which probably use more power when shut off.
The other benefit of a 19-foot CRT is that you can give free X-rays to the entire neighborhood. Think of the savings on health care!
Lived in Interior BC (down to -38 on the odd occasion, dry cold though so it's not too bad if you're not in the wind) and now live in Toronto (last winter was >-30, not sure what the regular is, but it's a wet cold so it tends to "seep in" a bit more):
I had gas heat in BC, and I have hot-water heat in Ontario.
I've had electric before in BC as well, though. The power consumption depends on how you use it, among other things.
If you've good thermostats and adjustable base-heaters in a per-room basis, you can let them crank the heat down a lot at night in the larger but unused areas of the house, and then warm up in the morning. For the bedrooms, you can adjust to your own comfort level at night-time, but let them drop in times when you're in common areas. So the temperates around the house will see-saw depending on what rooms you need warmth in more, but you can adjust to conserve power while maintaining overall comfort.
Still, nothing's quite as nice as having a good efficient gas fireplace in the central area of the house, especially if *that* has a thermostat (my last house did). You can turn it down at night, but it sure heats up a room quickly and when you've got "cold-balls" from shoveling a few feet of snow, nothing beats sitting in front of the hot fireplace!
You did not ask about resume, so I won't go there, ok I'll say this, it works very well after hibernate.
All we have do is drill in ANWAR. Problem solved! Stupid tree huggers.
the 'pea' is not under any of the cups. it's gone. greed, fear & ego are unprecedented evile's primary weapons. those, along with deception & coercion, helps most of us remain (unwittingly?) dependent on its' life0cidal hired goons' agenda. most of yOUR dwindling resources are being squandered on the 'wars', & continuation of the billionerrors stock markup FraUD/pyramid schemes. nobody ever mentions the real long term costs of those debacles in both life & any notion of prosperity for us, or our children, not to mention the abuse of the consciences of those of us who still have one. see you on the other side of it. the lights are coming up all over now. conspiracy theorists are being vindicated. some might choose a tin umbrella to go with their hats. the fairytail is winding down now. let your conscience be yOUR guide. you can be more helpful than you might have imagined. there are still some choices. if they do not suit you, consider the likely results of continuing to follow the corepirate nazi hypenosys story LIEn, whereas anything of relevance is replaced almost instantly with pr ?firm? scriptdead mindphuking propaganda or 'celebrity' trivia 'foam'. meanwhile; don't forget to get a little more oxygen on yOUR brain, & look up in the sky from time to time, starting early in the day. there's lots going on up there.
http://news.google.com/?ncl=1216734813&hl=en&topic=n
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/31/opinion/31mon1.html?em&ex=1199336400&en=c4b5414371631707&ei=5087%0A
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080918/ap_on_re_us/tent_cities;_ylt=A0wNcyS6yNJIZBoBSxKs0NUE
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/29/world/29amnesty.html?hp
http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/06/02/nasa.global.warming.ap/index.html
http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/weather/06/05/severe.weather.ap/index.html
http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/weather/06/02/honore.preparedness/index.html
http://www.cnn.com/2008/TECH/science/09/28/what.matters.meltdown/index.html#cnnSTCText
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/01/opinion/01dowd.html?em&ex=1212638400&en=744b7cebc86723e5&ei=5087%0A
http://www.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/06/05/senate.iraq/index.html
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/17/washington/17contractor.html?hp
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/03/world/middleeast/03kurdistan.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin
http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/080708/cheney_climate.html
http://news.yahoo.com/s/politico/20080805/pl_politico/12308;_ylt=A0wNcxTPdJhILAYAVQms0NUE
http://www.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/09/18/voting.problems/index.html
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080903/ts_nm/
At the electronics lab where I hang out, there is a story about some guys who wanted to feed their processor a triangle wave clock signal instead of a square wave because "it contains less energy". People told them nothing good would come out of it, but they tried it anyway and nothing good came out of it.
Swedish plasma phys. PhD student; MSc EE; knows maths, programming, electronics; finance interest; seeks opportunities
I had a dell w/ that feature, and I LOVED it! My computer and my coffee were ready for me every morning!
How much is your data worth? Back it up now.
is still bs all the same.
How much is your data worth? Back it up now.
I'm rainbow bright you insensitive clod!
How much is your data worth? Back it up now.
Unless you need it for safety, losing the power lights could make a rather substantial difference. Do we really need all those lights?
Hibernate mode in XP saves the state of the system to RAM and then maintains the RAM image even though the rest of the system is powered down.
Wrong! Hibernate saves the state to disk and powers down. "Stand By" saves the state to ram and then keeps the ram powered while everything else turns off.
New servers have 95 percent efficient power supplies
Wrong! Only a few power supplies are more than 85% efficient and none of the normal Dells or HPs you buy top 90%.
Power cycling healthy electronics is not a source of stress
Wrong! Anything that causes a rapid change in temperature is a source of stress. The materials expand and contract and different parts expand and contract at different rates. It's no different than the winter/summer cycle cracking the sidewalk.
Battery life for either type of battery can be prolonged greatly by removing the battery when the unit is plugged into AC power.
True, but an incredibly bad idea. The battery stabilizes current from the relatively crappy power brick. It can't do that if it isn't plugged in. And a single crash due to a power failure is likely to cost you more in the cost of your very valuable time than all the electricity you might save. Tis better to designate one battery your "docked" battery and make sure that when you're not recharging your travel batteries, you only your docked battery is connected.
If customers need to wait while you spin up cold spares to handle rising workload, brag about it.
What kind of crack are you smoking, and why haven't you shared?
Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
Why can't they display the dang article on one page rather than making me hit "next page" over and over. I know it's off topic but it's annoying in such a short article.
No matter where you go, there you are.
Is this true? Does anyone know of any sources for the differences in battery lifetime if you do this?
Generally the database data would reside on a commercial grade SAN on real disks, not in a virtual disk.
Given that, and the server software running in a VM, you get :
100% uptime even in the face of hardware upgrades. VMware lets you migrate a running VM from one physical machine to a different physical machine without bringing down the running virtual machine.
Even if you're ok with bringing down the virtual machine, the ability to move the VM from one box to a new box without changing / reinstalling / doing ANYTHING - upgrade hardware to much faster hardware in about an hour with very little effort - and if you go from a single CPU box to a much faster single CPU box, you don't even pay licensing upgrade fees for 'per CPU licensing'.
Snapshots make replicating the environment to use in your DEV / TEST / PERF environments ... a snap. Just rename the server and use different data.
Ditto for Disaster Recovery.
Ability to provision multiple servers on a single physical box, effectively minimizing the impact of adding each additional machine on your environment (heat, space, electricity).
Ability to bring different virtual servers up / down on the same hardware, giving you much more flexibility on how you use your existing hardware.
Because it's FUN! (Yea I know - I need to get out more.)
Glonoinha the MebiByte Slayer
I don't know about all of those, but some of them were inaccurate enough to cause me to question the rest. For example, the author doesn't seem to know the difference between sleep and hibernation, and claims that when the computer is hibernating, it still draws power causing the AC/DC converter to stay warm, which is simply not true. The computer is completely powered off during hibernation, which I'm sure everyone already knows, and the heat generated in the converter is due to resistance in the converter and will occur as long as it's plugged into the wall, even if the DC side isn't plugged into anything.
The path to enlightenment is truly through homemade drugs!
At the answer to myth number two. Anyone who can suggest something like that even in jest clearly has little IT background and even less future.
Where is the research?
Where is the data?
Yet another article reinforcing my believe that any articles with a numeral in the headline, that are a list of stuff, all suck.
Or don't have any common sense. If the computer uses twice as much power under load than when idle (on the high side, especially for an office machine), and it takes a long 15 minutes for the computer to start, you would be saving power by turning them off unless "overnight" is 30 minutes or less.
I've always wondered why we don't see the IT industry adopting the telephone company model for power. Telcos run everything directly off a 48 volt battery plant. The batteries are continuously trickle charged. In a power outage, the batteries just stop charging for a little while. So you don't need a separate UPS with charger, inverter, and so on. You don't need separate surge protection -- the AC->DC conversion gives you more than adequate isolation. If it was a 12 volt battery plant instead of a 48 volt one, you've be able to build smaller, cheaper power supplies in the PCs, since you'd only need a 12->5 and 12->3.3 volt DC/DC conversion. Seems like a no brainer to me.
I guess voltage drop would be a concern (12 volt DC won't go too terribly far), but the telcos seem happy solving that problem with big ass bus bars; would the same work for PCs?
Is there something I'm missing?
dragonhawk@iname.microsoft.com
I do not like Microsoft. Remove them from my email address.
Um, your computer is way underpowered or your IT department sucks because 15 minutes to boot in crazy.
Symantec Anti-Virus Corporate Edition and Microsoft Windows Update after the MSKB 927891 hotfix seem to have some kind of pathologically bad interaction during/immediately-after startup, where the disk thrashes like crazy no matter how much hardware you have. The computer can be almost unusably slow for one to five minutes after boot. Microsoft blames Symantec, Symantec blames Microsoft, I get nowhere. Since we can't jettison Windows (oh, how much I'd love to), we're jettisoning Symantec at the end of our current contract, but that's still several months out. In the mean, we're just telling everybody to leave their PCs on. Nice, eh?
dragonhawk@iname.microsoft.com
I do not like Microsoft. Remove them from my email address.
That's my experience too. In fact it's so flasless, I wouldn't even know a flas if I saw one.
My Ubuntu laptop suspends and hibernates just fine. It never wakes up from hibernate, but it gets there perfectly... and without flas.
I don't therefore I'm not.
How about saving power by using lynx instead of a nice fancy graphical browser? Hell! I just did!
The game.
I just had to laugh when I saw Myth #2. Sure, of course I'm not going to go to a competitors site when yours tells me to wait while your servers boot up *rolls eyes*. In reality, of course, they should be able to load up a spare before the load on the existing boxes hits 100%. But the author sounded totally serious that he thought it'd be fine to have a site that makes you wait several minutes to load a page.
"Or if the outside temp falls below 30 degrees Fahrenheit, as heat pumps will not work below like 20 degrees."
Work all winter down to -20C.
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Another aspect claimed by the article is that even with Hibernate there is still some power drain, altough below 1W.
I do know that my laptop had Wake-on-LAN turned on in the BIOS. After disabling it, I stopped noticing 1% or 2% missing charge after being hibernated for a couple of days without being plugged in.