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.
Three of Asia’s biggest conglomerates want to get into greentech.
Stoneyfield Farm’s chief executive recounts the company’s experiment of feeding milk cows food other than corn to reduce methane emissions and produce healthier yogurt.
Everyone loves OLEDs, but no one knows how to make big ones. Kateeva says it can help.
The Kleiner, Perkins-backed maker of resource, energy, waste and carbon-tracking software now has $20 million to fund expansion into internationally.
Data centers spend up to half their energy on cooling. AdaptivCool wants to deliver that cold air only where it’s needed.
Samsung has a green phone. Here’s the good and the bad.
The company uses many sensors to determine the operational status of the white goods and optimally operate them in accordance with the status.
The California utility is seeking bids for carbon emission reduction projects in order to buy offsets on behalf of its customers. PG&E aims to offset 1.5 million tons of emissions through this pilot project.
The company claims its air conditioners will use as much power as a fan. Welcome to the arcane, yet significant, world of cooling.
The government will be one of the largest customers for building retrofits. Hallowell is tackling the market with improved heat pump systems for Air Force Base housing.
Those building automation systems for controlling lights actually work, says a new PG&E study. Expect sales to zoom.
Chevron Energy Services is saving the U.S. Postal Service about $11 million a year with its efficiency retrofits that include cheaper lights, software-controlled HVAC systems, solar panels and fuel cells.
The Obama Administration has been meeting with green execs to finetune an energy strategy it hopes to flesh out around September 23.
Oorja Protronics says Nissan and other large companies hear the fuel cell message. Prices are dropping too.
Don’t think of ice as cold. It’s a demand response vehicle, says Ice Energy.
Ford says that it can cut the energy and carbon associated with paint by phasing out water for industrial chemicals. What?
The tax credit program is capped at $2.3 billion and is the latest of a series of financial aid initiatives aimed at boosting renewable energy and other greentech manufacturing and job creation.
An idea coined by Stan Ovshinsky for memory chips is finally coming to the fore.
The TV accounts for about 10 percent of total power consumption in the home, and TV manufacturers who are recognizing that low-power products will be more competitive are engaged in an intense performance competition.
Green software is popping up all over. Here are our favorites.