Corporations now depend on computing resources to handle everything from mission-critical financial transactions to storing vast amounts of patient information. Data center facilities are under pressure to flawlessly add significant, reliable computing power.
While blades have addressed some of these challenges, IT administrators are wondering, “Am I getting enough power to the blades?” “Do I have excess capacity?” and “Am I getting enough cooling to those racks?”
Download now »With Giants like SAP enterering the carbon accounting business, do you think there is still room for startups?
Everyone loves OLEDs, but no one knows how to make big ones. Kateeva says it can help.
Hydromatic Technologies Corp. says its DryerMiser can cut in half the energy used by clothes dryers. With an Underwriters Laboratories approval under its belt, Hydromatic says it's ready to mass-produce its technology for retrofits and inclusion in mass-produced dryers.
Got some old PCs or printers sitting around? HP will give you cash for them. It's the latest step in the growing market for e-waste.
Imagine you are a CEO with a million square feet of real estate at your command. Now imagine having no idea how much power that consumes.
It's thin, it lasts a long time, and it's energy efficient. The Flat Panel Lamp from startup Lumiette is also made from a somewhat familiar technology. Say hello to the latest member of the new age light bulb club.
The maker of flywheel systems for energy storage says it will use the capital to expand manufacturing and continue development of its first energy storage project in New England.
Launching early next year, a NASA satellite for carbon dioxide study will collect data that will help scientists figure out how nature absorbs man-made emissions.
Seattle's VU1 is releasing an energy-efficient bulb next year that functions a lot like a familiar household appliance.
Carbon tax advocates are drumming up support for their cause, arguing that the tax will work better than a carbon cap-and-trade in the United States. The debate will heat up when Obama becomes president.
The company can flip your PC off or on remotely. Now it wants to do the same with your lights and it has a new CEO.
The EMerge Alliance says low-voltage direct current built into interior spaces can power LED lights, sensors and other devices more efficiently that the AC wiring in use today.
Energy efficient building only costs about 2 percent more than traditional building methods and can save a third on energy costs, according to a study funded by investment firm Good Energies.
Energy-efficient lighting startups are competing to deliver power savings through a variety of technologies, including microplasma lights, high-intensity discharge lighting ballast systems, organic light-emitting diodes and others.
Power Assure, a data center management startup, has been attracting customers and awards with an application that puts servers into a deep sleep to keep power bills down.
Energy Capital Partners also commits up to $150 million more to help the company develop energy-storage projects for utilities.
Google.org is giving $250,000 to the U.S. National Academies to fund a study on how the United States and China can collaborate on solar and wind energy generation, energy storage and grid tech.
UPDATED 5:15 PM: While the financial crisis continues to undermine investor confidence, a few greentech companies, including solar firm Soliant Energy, announce decent-sized deals.
A new research report from the DOE found that the energy output saved by LED lighting could equal the output of 27 coal-fired plants.
The Swedish firm plans to open a 30-megawatt power plant next week to test its carbon capture and storage technology, a controversial approach to cutting emissions at coal-fired power plants.
The energy-management company is raising an undisclosed amount, while competitor Greenbox partners with Silver Spring Networks for its first pilot project for Oklahoma Gas and Electric.
The Japanese electronics giant plans to sell 11 LED lighting models for factories and offices.