Schneider Electric Research: Cash trumps Green initiatives

Schneider Electric has a study it is releasing soon with insights as to where environmental projects fit in corporate priorities.

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Fortune 1000: Despite Moral Obligation to Sustainability, Cash is Still King

Nearly 90 percent of senior executives feel morally responsible for making companies energy efficient, but cost savings remain biggest motivator; executives divided on impact of cap and trade, according to survey commissioned by Schneider Electric

 

Palatine, Ill. – February 9, 2011 – Eighty-eight percent of Fortune 1000 senior executives feel business has a moral responsibility, beyond regulatory requirements, to make their companies more energy efficient, according to a new poll released today by Harris Interactive and commissioned by Schneider Electric. At the same time, the vast majority (61 percent) of respondents say that potential cost savings are their biggest motivator to save energy at the enterprise-level, outranking environmental concerns (13 percent) or government regulations (2 percent).

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Three Data Center Rating Systems: Uptime, LEED, CEEDA

ZDNET has a post summarizing the three data center rating systems out there  - Uptime, LEED, and CEEDA.  The author summarizes the current rating system hype.

How does your datacenter rate?

By David Chernicoff | January 20, 2011, 11:39am PST

Many businesses looking at building new datacenters announce that they are planning on achieving certification for their new datacenter by an external authority that will evaluate their datacenter and grant a specific status or award to the facility. When the new datacenter gets such a status or award, the company will send out press releases, tell stockholders, and use it in their promotional material, if applicable. But the standard for the current crop of rating entities are consistent only across their own ratings, and there are more groups doing this than you might realize. Here’s the current crop of high-end standards and awards applied to datacenters.

One of the most popular out in the public is LEED, and the author pops that illusion .

Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED)

This standard, run by the US Green Building Council, you might be surprised to learn, is not a datacenter standard per se, despite all the press over the last year on datacenters achieving high LEED awards. The USGBC defines the standard as “a nationally accepted benchmark for the design, construction, and operation of high-performance green buildings.”  And while a datacenter needs to work hard to achieve LEED awards, the basic metric is not designed to rate a fully optimized datacenter.

Does your marketing group tell you to get a LEED rating?

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Last Month of traffic to Top 5 data center construction companies post, shows Morgan Stanley and Kaiser Permanente

Took a look at the last month, Dec 13 – Jan 12, 2011 traffic to my Top 5 Data Center Construction companies post. 

Roughly 400 hits through Google search. 

Two companies popped up with relatively high traffic.  Morgan Stanley and Kaiser Permanente.

Good chance someone in these companies is looking for data center construction and design.

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Estimating the size of Amazon Web Services using instances

Jack of all Clouds has a one year perspective on his method to count the EC2 instances on AWS to gauge the growth of amazon web services.

Recounting EC2 One Year Later

December 29th, 2010  |  Published in Analysis  |  9 Comments

It’s been over a year since my original Anatomy of an EC2 Resource ID post. In what became my little claim to fame in the industry, I uncovered the pattern behind those cryptic IDs AWS assigns to every object allocated (such as an instance, EBS volume, etc.). The discovery revealed that underlying the IDs is a regular serial number that increases with each resource allocated. While this may sound technical and insignificant, it turned out to be very valuable: it enabled, for the first time, a glimpse into the magnitude of Amazon’s cloud.

The numbers gathered in that post back in September 2009 showed that approximately 50,000 instances were being spun up every day on EC2 (in the us-east-1 region). So what’s happened since? I joined forces with CloudKick, providers of a cloud management and monitoring platform, to dig up more data. Here’s what we found: (click to expand to an interactive chart)


Click to open interactive chart

The chart above plots the number of instances launched per day, from mid-2007 till present day. Growth is, well, unmistakable. A couple of peaks dominate the landscape around February and October 2010, peaks which somewhat correlate to availability of new AWS services (see interactive map). The evidence is highly circumstantial though as I find it hard to draw a direct conclusion on how these specific events pushed the daily launch count as high up as 150,000.

Let’s zoom out now and look at EC2′s growth over the years:

What can you determine from these numbers?

Responding to my previous research, a top Amazon official commented that a count of instance launches doesn’t really reflect anything meaningful (like the actual customer base, server count or revenues – all of which we’d all love to figure out). I respond that it’s examining the numbers one year later that provides the real value: it’s like looking at a mysterious dial on your car’s dashboard: even without understanding the exact parameter measured, if it shoots up then there’s a decent chance you’re driving faster.

Watching my frozen kindle post.  It is interesting to see after 5 days traffic is twice the normal amount.  I would assume Amazon sold a significant number of Kindles as Xmas gifts.

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The numbers alone may not tell you the answer, but they give you a hint on magnitude and direction.

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Validating Kindle 3 Sales of Millions sold this quarter

One of my technical helpers is getting a Kindle 3 for Xmas and we were talking about setting it up for the family.  At $139 it is hard to argue with as a gift, and they know I’ll be totally into how to set it up and I know the tip for what happens if the Kindle 3 locks up and has a frozen screen.

Today CNET news digs into the Kindle Community to find some data on the #' sold.  How well is the Kindle 3 selling?

Amazon: 'Millions' of Kindles sold this quarter

by David Carnoy

Amazon continues to hint at very strong sales numbers for the Kindle without giving exact figures.

(Credit: Amazon)

Last week, Barnes & Noble's chairman Len Riggio mentioned in an interview that his company was producing 18,000 Nook Colors per day, straining to keep up with holiday demand. This week it's Amazon's turn to trumpet Kindle sales, but it isn't CEO Jeff Bezos doing the talking. The company sometimes prefers to do its PR via its own "Kindle Community" message boards.

In this case, the little nugget of info was embedded in a thank you to customers for helping Amazon sell millions of Kindles and a reminder that the device is offering the latest, "most advanced" E Ink Pearl display (which the e-ink Nook doesn't have).

"Thanks to you, in just the first 73 days of this holiday quarter, we've already sold millions of our all-new Kindles with the latest E Ink Pearl display," the post reads. "In fact, in the last 73 days, readers have purchased more Kindles than we sold during all of 2009."

Going to my own data source my blog entry on resetting the Kindle here is the past 3 months of traffic.  Note there is no big drop off in hits to my blog entry.  I think my blog entry gives some pretty solid evidence of Kindle 3 sales.  I wonder how much my data analytics is worth to the Barnes and Noble Nook guys.  Smile

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What is kind of scary is there are 13,000 page views for frozen Kindles. 

Top 10 search terms.

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Another top traffic entry I have is on the top 5 data center construction companies.

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