IBM and the Environment

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* [[Performance Per Watt on Power6: Same Thermals, More Work (22-Aug-07)]]
* [[Could IBM Be the World's First Green Business Behemoth? (22-Aug-07)]]
* [[Could IBM Be the World's First Green Business Behemoth? (22-Aug-07)]]
* [[IBM Linux Initiative Greens Data Centers (9-Aug-07)]]
* [[IBM Linux Initiative Greens Data Centers (9-Aug-07)]]

Revision as of 09:03, 23 August 2007

Contents

MI Summary

Full article: IBM and the Environment

Coverage in the Press

Text of IBM Articles on IBM and its close partners

Analyst Views and IBM

Summaries

Full article: Servers move from a guzzle to a sip, on w3 (1-Aug-07)

IBM is not jumping on the green bandwagon. We’ve been driving it for nearly 40 years. Now IBM is dramatically simplifying our IT infrastructure, identifying almost 4,000 distributed servers at its data centers around the world whose work will be consolidated onto about 30 mainframes. Power and cooling costs alone will be reduced by a 80%.

Since Thomas Watson’s call to action in 1971, IBM has been an environmental leader. In 1973, CEO Frank Cary updated IBM’s corporate policy on environmental protection, stating: “IBM will reduce to a minimum the ecological impact of all its activities."

Full article: System i and the green skeptic (16-Jul-07)

The article wonders whether System i really is more energy-efficient per workload than the equivalent computing power of scaled-out x86 boxes, because of its higher utilisation and use of virtualisation and logical partitions. (Does anyone really believe that IBM’s endeavours are environmentally altruistic?) It applauds the Power6 processor, which is twice as fast as the previous generation using almost no more energy.

Full article: Turning your Servers green

IBM, HP, Sun and AMD have launched The Green Grid, a non-profit consortium which aims to cut energy consumption at computer data centres by encouraging power-saving measures.

Full article: Lenovo tops eco-friendly league

Lenovo is top (displacing Nokia) and Apple is bottom of Greenpeace's league table. Lenovo offers take-back and recycling in all countries where it operates.

Links to IBM papers on the Environment

For an overview on the topic(s), see also

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