Google's Story of Google Apps, 65-85% less energy, US GSA migrates 17,000 for a $285,000 savings (90% energy reduction)

Google had a viral video on The Story of Send.  Google just released a post that fits in the same theme with what could be "The Story of Google Apps."

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The blog post is backed up with a paper.

The data that gives this story credibility is the win Google had for Google Apps with the US GSA.

Lower energy use results in less carbon pollution and more energy saved for organizations. That’s what happened at the U.S. General Services Administration (GSA), which recently switched its 17,000 users to Google Apps for Government. We found that the GSA was able to reduce server energy consumption by nearly 90% and carbon emissions by 85%. That means the GSA will save an estimated $285,000 annually on energy costs alone, a 93% cost reduction.

The specifics of the GSA story are here.

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It wasn't too long ago that any small business that wanted e-mail was seriously looking at putting an e-mail server on site.  What small business does that now?  Along with that came Office licenses.  Google is targeting this whole Office document e-mail system with cloud services that are much more efficient.

A typical organization has a lot more servers than it needs—for backup, failures and spikes in demand for computing. Cloud-based service providers like Google aggregate demand across thousands of people, substantially increasing how much servers are utilized. And our data centers use equipment and software specially designed to minimize energy use. The cloud can do the same work much more efficiently than locally hosted servers.

All of this is built on Google's green data centers.

We’ve built efficient data centers all over the world, even designing them in ways that make the best use of the natural environment, and we continue working to improve their performance. We think using the super-efficient cloud to deliver services like Google Apps can be part of the solution towards a more energy efficient future.

Posted by Urs Hoelzle, Senior Vice President for Technical Infrastructure


(Cross-posted on the Google Green Blog)

More Pictures inside Google Data Center - Networking Room

We've all been in plenty of data centers, but many haven't and they will get excited seeing these pictures inside google.

You can see these pictures at this url http://www.google.com/green/storyofsend/desktop/#/clear-instructions/overlay/inside-networking

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Google's servers are here. http://www.google.com/green/storyofsend/desktop/#/hard-working-machines/overlay/our-servers

 

In less than 24 hrs Google's Story of Send video reaches 149,713 views

Yesterday I posted on Google's Story of Send post.  And, my specific metric to see how well the video did was that when I looked at the video it had 301 views.  Well less than 24hrs later the views have hit 149,713.

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A Google Search for "the story of send" has 2,810,000 results

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With my post at least for now in position #9

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Part of the high video traffic was the media picking up on the release.

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The Google Data Center team has got to be ecstatic with the coverage.  For those who think blogs are dead and Twitter is the answer.  Try to tell this story in 140 characters.  Now you may get more Twitter Traffic if you are Ashton Kutcher, but is the media going to cover your story.

Google's Green Email Story: The Story of Send

Google has just released its environmentally sensitive post on the story of gmail.

Follow an email’s journey with Story of Send

5/15/12 | 8:08:00 AM

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(cross-posted on the Official Google Blog)

If you’re anything like me, you send and receive a lot of emails every day. But have you ever wondered where your message goes after you hit “send?” How does an email travel from your computer to your friend’s smartphone across the country or around the world?

We’re answering those questions with Story of Send, a new site that gives you a behind-the-scenes look into how all that virtual information makes its journey through the real world—from your Internet service provider to our data centers and beyond. Along the way, you’ll discover everything from where we filter for spam and scan for viruses to how we’re minimizing our impact on the environment through energy efficiency and renewable power.

A video is here.

With the home page for the story here http://www.google.com/green/storyofsend/desktop/.  One of the things I am curious is how viral this video will be.  It currently has 301 views.

Here are some of the environmental messages in the story.

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Here are some pictures of the green servers.

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