Obama’s Supreme Court Nominee is Favored by Environmentalists

NYTimes has an interesting article about Obama’s Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor.

Enviro groups like what they see in Obama's justice pick

  • Published: May 27, 2009

"Judge Sotomayor is well-qualified in light of her personal, academic, legal and judicial experience," said Glenn Sugameli, senior legislative counsel and head of Earthjustice's judicial nominations project. "Her knowledge, understanding and service as a federal trial and appellate court judge provide invaluable perspectives for deciding environmental protection and related issues."

What has the environmentalists excited is a ruling on temperature of water from power plants.

Environmentalists primarily are pointing to a single 2007 decision by Sotomayor -- on U.S. EPA's use of cost-benefit analysis in the regulation of pollutants -- as a signal that the potential future justice may side with them on a number of issues.

In that case, Riverkeeper v. EPA, an environmental group challenged an EPA rule relating to cooling-water intake structures in power plants. The agency was set to require hundreds of power plants to modify their water cooling systems, which cumulatively caused the deaths of millions of fish every year.

But the agency sought to choose the "best technology" for the upgrade, using a cost-benefit analysis that was based on both the price of the newer equipment and the potential marine life that would be killed. The top-of-the-line technology could reduce fish kills by as much as 98 percent, though it cost roughly 10 times as much as a different type of equipment that would reduce deaths by a smaller amount.

Sotomayor issued an opinion in which she declared that the Clean Water Act did not give EPA the leeway to do such a cost-benefit analysis.

In early 2008, the U.S. Supreme Court reversed the decision in a 6-3 ruling, with Justice Antonin Scalia stating in an opinion that EPA could use such an analysis in crafting its regulations.

Bet, you didn’t think the selection of Supreme Court justice could effect your power and cooling infrastructure.

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Green Data Center Tip, Security and Green Monitoring

Just got off the phone with a IT reporter and he was asking about Security and Green IT.

Found this article.

How To Design Green AND Secure Buildings

The secure and the environmentally-friendly almost always conflict when designing a building. But experts at an "intelligent building" seminar demonstrated how security features can actually help make a structure green

» Comments

By Bill Brenner, Senior Editor

March 05, 2009 — CSO

Put a security guy in a room with an environmentalist and ask them to design a building. Wait five minutes and you'll hear fists pounding tables, chairs hitting walls and a steady flow of profanity.

The problem? Green features are often seen as a vulnerability to the security professional while security features are often considered ugly and wasteful to the designer who wants to make a structure green.

But it doesn't have to be this way, according to a group of experts who gathered in Woburn, Mass., Wednesday for a seminar on intelligent building design. A main focus of the event -- hosted by integrated building management systems vendor TAC -- was to demonstrate how the secure and the green can exist in the same space and even compliment one another.

The key tip was to have one system that can monitor security and energy factors.

"Security performs a lot of the functionality that building automation does to control energy consumption, such as turning lights off and on, controlling thermostats and notifying you when a door or window has been left open," he said. "The same technology used for access control and security can also be used to measure and conserve energy."

Environmentally-friendly access control
For example, he said, surveillance cameras installed to monitor who is coming in and out of a room can also be used to measure light levels and notify building managers if a light is burning too brightly or if something has been left on. Access control can be used to keep tabs on energy consumption just as easily as it can be used to limit an employee's access to certain IT systems and corridors, Hess said.

How many people design one system to do security and environmental monitoring? 

To drive home the point, seminar organizers began the track of security presentations with an overview of new buildings planned for the University of Massachusetts' Amherst campus. The university's $640 million capital improvement plan for new research buildings and other structures are full of green features. But when pressed by attendees, UMass facilities planner Thomas Huf admitted the plans were lacking in terms of security controls.

"We don't have a central security design at this point," Huf said.

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Technical Greenmetrics Conference, June 15 2009

fyi, there is a SIG Greenmetrics conference on June 15, 2009 in Seattle.

GreenMetrics 2009 Workshop
June 15, 2009 - Seattle, WA
*Subject to Change*

Monday, June 15, 2009

08:00 -- 08:30

Opening Remarks and Introduction

08:30 -- 09:30

Keynote: Charles Kalko, Operation Excellence Program Lead, eBay
(Title TBA)

09:30 -- 9:50

COFFEE BREAK

9:50 -- 10:30

Session 1: Networks
"Energy Efficient Management of two Cellular Access Networks," Marco
Marsan and Michela Meo (Politecnico di Torino,)

"Fair Greening for DSL Broadband Access," Paschalis Tsiaflakis
(Katholieke Universiteit Leuven), Yung Yi (KAIST), Mung Chiang
(Princeton), Marc Moonen (Katholieke Universiteit Leuven)

10:30 -- 11:10

Session 2: Servers and Data Centers
"Blackbox Prediction of the Impact of DVFS on End-to-End Performance
of Multi-Tiered Systems," Shuyi Chen (UIUC), Kaustubh Joshi (AT&T
Research), Matti Hiltunen (AT&T Research), Richard Schlichting (AT&T
Research), William Sanders (UIUC)

"Quantifying the Sustainability Impact of Data Center Availability,"
M. Marwah (HP Labs), P. Maciel (UFPE), A. Shah (HP Labs), R. Sharma
(HP Labs), T. Christian (HP Labs), V. Almeida (UFMG), C. Araujo (UFPE), E. Souza (UFPE), G. Callou (UFPE), B. Silva (UFPE), S. Galdino (UFPE), J. Pires (HP Brazil)

11:10 -- 11:50

Session 3: Industry Initiatives
"Product Environmental Metrics for Printers," Jason Ord, Scott
Canonico, Tim Strecker and Ellen Chappell (Hewlett-Packard Company
)
"The Sustainability Hub: An Information Management Tool for Analysis
and Decision Making," Steve Cayzer and Chris Preist (Hewlett-Packard
Laboratories)

11:50 -- 12:00

Closing Comments

Registration is here.

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Insight to Blogging Brands, Exciting and Boring

Thanks to Deborah Grove, there was panel discussion at Uptime Institute with Rich Miller (datacenterknowledge), Kevin Heslin (Mission Critical), Matt Stansberry (Searchdatacenter) and me to discuss blogs and the environment.

We each have different approaches.  One thing I research is how blogs work to discuss ideas. I spent a long time being a technical evangelist which required lots of travelling and presentations.

Here is a blog post I found that has some interesting data.

Social Strategy for Exciting (and Boring) Brands

By Josh Bernoff

(From my Marketing News column.)

Cover April 30 There are two kinds of brands in the world. If you are a marketer, you know what I mean. There are brands people like to talk about, and brands they don’t.

Brands of the first kind – the brands that marketing thinker Rohit Bhargava calls “talkable” – are uncommon. Apple’s iPhone is a talkable brand. So is Harley-Davidson. If you market a talkable brand, you have the luxury of tapping into customers who love you, but you’ll have to be careful – those customers have already decided what the brand stands for, and woe unto you if you go against their wishes.

Brands that people don’t like to talk about – I’ll call them “boring” brands – are everywhere. If, like most marketers, you market a boring brand, then you’re really earning your living as a marketer. That’s because you are trying to get people interested in something they don’t really care about.

I’ve been analyzing social strategies for both kinds of brands, and they form an interesting contrast.

Most of the data center vendors are boring brands. I was lucky to work at Apple and Microsoft two exciting brands.  I can’t think of a brand that people are excited the way they are about their ipod, iphone, and macs.

The boring brands have different problem, but social applications can help them, too. [Forrester Report: "Social Technology Strategies for 'Boring' Consumer Brands".] The key with boring brands is to get people talking about their problems, since they won’t talk about your brand. In advertising, you can force messages on people watching other things. In a social context, this fails miserably.

So, what do you do?

Applications that talk about customers problems create “borrowed relevance,” since you generate talk they care about, then make yourself a part of it. American Express (credit cards are boring, face it) created the Members’ Project, a contest to choose deserving charities, since it realized that charity would generate more passion than credit cards. And in perhaps the most dramatic example, Procter & Gamble knew girls wouldn’t talk about tampons, but would talk about music, cliques, and school, so it created beinggirl.com as a vehicle to deliver (very quietly) the occasional feminine care products message.

Borrowed relevance is a versatile strategy. Liberty Mutual (in another boring category, insurance) wrapped itself in relevance by creating The Responsibility Project, a community about moral decisions. Johnson & Johnson built a Facebook page for mothers of ADHD kids – because, as with all medications, its ADHD drug is boring but its sufferers generate interesting problems. Doritos invited its customers to make ads in the 2007 Superbowl, since an ad contest is more exciting – and more social – than a corn chip.

and  why?

If your brand is talkable, your social efforts will surface the brand enthusiasts who have the most influence. If it’s boring, your social applications will help you find your rare but valuable brand enthusiasts, or even generate a few. Pay attention to these people. Because as advertising clutter rises and word of mouth becomes more important, they’re about to become some of your most important corporate assets.

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Example of Modeling in a Data Center, eBay Software Architect Shares

This article is old, Feb 28, 2008, but when the article was written eBay was 1/3 the way through their 3 year project, and the architect Paul Strong shares his ideas and approach.

The company's a third of the way through a major three-year grid computing initiative, hard at work developing software and employing technologies that can describe the relationships between and among hardware and software in its data centers with the eventual goal of making eBay easier to manage, quicker to upgrade, and scalable beyond imagination.

The specifics that let me know Paul was on the right path are here.

For the time being, new semantic and modeling technologies help eBay (NSDQ: EBAY) describe its systems, understand how they relate to one another, and even discover systems it didn't previously know were there. For example, eBay is beginning to use the Resource Description Framework and the Web Ontology Language, two Semantic Web technologies, to "store and query relationships" between and among the software and hardware in its networks.

EBay also is working with others to create standard ways to describe how software and devices in a network relate to one another, known as modeling. It monitors many of the emerging modeling standards groups, but the company chairs the Open Grid Forum's Reference Model working group, because, according to Strong, the OGF is "the only place specifically focused on large distributed systems." Strong also acts as chair of the OGF itself.

The OGF's Reference Model group's focus is to develop a common modeling language to unify other standards like the Information Technology Infrastructure Library (ITIL) and Distributed Management Task Force (DMTF). "No one tool can manage the modern data center, so interoperability is absolutely critical," Strong said. The work eBay has done with the OGF has informed its own ontology, which could provide a starting point for implementing future technologies that take advantage of these emerging standards to simplify distributed management.

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