Secret to GreenM3 High Google Search Results – 12,200 Backlinks

As part of running this blog I am interested in how people find my blog and what they are searching for.  Green Data Center are the main key words I focus on but I am constantly surprised at how my google search results work for various topics.

As part of bing.com there are webmaster stats I can look at.  Here is the current screen shot.

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Ahh, 12,200 backlinks exist to my blog entries.

Backlinks (or back-links [UK]) are incoming links to a website or web page. In the search engine optimization (SEO) world, the number of backlinks is one indication of the popularity or importance of that website or page (though other measures, such as PageRank, are likely to be more important). Outside of SEO, the backlinks of a webpage may be of significant personal, cultural or semantic interest: they indicate who is paying attention to that page.

I knew people were linking to my blog and posts, but didn’t know there were that many. The high backlink count is something I didn’t know, and I can add it to secrets of my blog.  Well, it is not much a secret as I blog about it, but it makes for a catchy title.

Thanks for linking to my posts, and letting me know what I post is useful.

-dave

 

As an example of backlinks driving results, google search for “urs hoelzle” produces the following.  I’ve made it up to high search results based on backlinks, as I know it is not pure traffic as the googleblog’s have probably 100 times the amount of traffic I do.

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The Community Impact of Google’s Dalles Data Center, Voldemort Industries "He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named"

Oregonlive.com has an article about Google’s impact to the Dalles community and economy. The article and video starts discussing the towns history of depending on cheap power for an aluminum plant.

Columbia Gorge bucks economic winds, especially in The Dalles

by Laura Oppenheimer, The Oregonian

Saturday June 06, 2009, 12:00 PM

A New Outlook for The Dalles

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All the "Jobless in Oregon" stories

Galen May rode his bicycle along the Columbia River as a boy, watching workers build the aluminum plant that would become the economic heart of The Dalles.

"Little did I know, 50 years later, I'd be the one tearing it down," says May, who spent his career here, mostly as environmental manager.

During boom times, this expanse of long, skinny buildings -- almost a million square feet -- hummed 24 hours a day, seven days a week, run by 500 workers who bought houses, raised children, shopped at the local hardware store and ate at local restaurants.

During bad times, jobs and hope burned like molten aluminum. Home values plummeted, and Wasco County posted some of Oregon's worst unemployment rates.

Sorry can’t embed the video.  Nothing spectacular as it just shows a few google employees being interviewed in the cafeteria.

What is more interesting is the reference to reaction before google arrived.

When Google discovered The Dalles several years ago -- drawn by reliable power and fiber connectivity, available land and a cooperative community -- people were quick to paint the company as savior or villain.

There was talk of a high-tech boom, and real estate values soared 50 percent in a year as speculators scooped up houses. During construction, the data center created jobs and filled hotels. But many natives bristled at Google's secretive approach: The project was known by a code name, and critics feared the company would simply import workers from its California headquarters.

The reality is more nuanced.

Home prices inched back down, and you won't find Facebook or Microsoft in The Dalles. Still, Google has become a powerful symbol of transformation.

And, a Harry Potter reference.

As you pull up to the riverfront campus, you'll spot a Voldemort Industries sign, a self-effacing reference to the Harry Potter character known as "He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named."

And after.

Google officials say they learned from the backlash, and make a point to be transparent when they open data centers. They have also gotten involved in The Dalles. Workers volunteer at cleanups or Habitat for Humanity; a garden at the edge of the property is public; grants go to community groups. Last fall, Google hosted an open house at its cafeteria and visitor center.

This is where employees go for a massage (they get a one-hour credit on their birthdays) and daily free lunch, which might include vegan bean loaf or salmon with braised leeks, tomato and saffron. They can play foosball or raid the patio for dodge ball or bocce ball gear.

About 200 people work on campus, including contracted security, catering and housekeeping. Those inside the data center can't give details, except to say they're the mechanics who keep the Internet running.

Camden Lindsay, a 30-year-old project manager, oversaw technology at a cherry operation before he joined Google.

"The experience I got working for Orchard View Farms was really the experience I needed to get this job," he says.

Blair Ellsworth, who grew up in Hood River, worked a cherry harvest and a pear harvest after graduating from college in 2005. Meanwhile, he hunted for more permanent employment.

"I was expecting to get a job in Portland. That's where I was focusing most of my effort," Ellsworth says -- until he heard about Google.

Hiring locally is a priority, says data center manager Dave Karlson, former technology director for the local education service district.

Managers persuaded Google's human resources department to advertise in the town newspaper, not just the company Web site. Karlson knew they'd reach people with a built-in advantage.

"We can teach you the technical stuff," he says. "We can't teach you to live in the gorge."

As I’ve said in an interview with Google’s Urs Hoelzle, hiding creates negative effects. Data Centers are just starting to be transparent.

Google Uncloaks PUE Data Center Details

Why is it important for Google and others to uncloak? Star Trek's Gene Roddenberry provides a view on human nature.

Gene Roddenberry indicated in various interviews that "our heroes don't sneak around", indicating that the Federation made a conscious decision to not develop cloaking technology.
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What’s Next as Intel buys Wind River Systems?

There is lots of news on Intel’s purchase of Wind River Systems. The Wind River PR folks must like the Fool.com article as they point to this one on their home page.

Intel Has Wind in Its Sails

By Anders Bylund (TMF Zahrim)
June 4, 2009 | Comments (0)

The Atom processor may have disappointed Intel (Nasdaq: INTC) investors last quarter -- but the company is not giving up on the ultra-light computing market.

Instead, Intel is getting much more serious about netbooks and handheld gadgets. The semiconductor titan is buying device software specialist Wind River Systems (Nasdaq: WIND) for $884 million in cash, or $11.50 per share. And on the same day, Intel released four new low-voltage processors for ultra-thin mobile systems. I can see a market focus taking shape.

The one sentence summarizing the value of Wind River to Intel is:

Intel gets a software development package that helps gadget builders make the most of their hardware.

Wind River’s annual report has a description of their value.

Wind River’s value proposition—enabling customers and partners to do more with less—is extremely compelling in today’s cost focused environment. Market forces driving the adoption of Device Software Optimization (DSO) are consistent with our strengths and core competencies. Increasingly, our customers, device manufacturers, are faced with shrinking time to market deadlines. The functionality requirements for devices are exploding, as the amount of software that differentiates devices is increasing significantly. Device and application performance demands are increasing. Higher device quality is imperative. And the pressure to reduce device costs is paramount. We believe the combination of these market forces have and will continue to help catalyze a shift from customers building device software in-house to buying commercial-ready solutions like the market leading solutions Wind River offers.

When you read this, you can see how you can describe Wind River as a green system developer, focusing on getting the most performance from the hardware.

There are some data center market leader who are focusing on this same idea of how to green their data center.

It is hard to believe that the ARM chip developers at Wind River see a long future. Where will these engineers and executives go? Given the popularity of the ARM chip, it is not hard to imagine a bunch of VCs seeing Intel’s acquisition of Wind River as an opportunity to fund development of new OS’s.

Green Hills Software is a Wind River Competitor as well as QNX.

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Green Monitoring Solution from Hara – Sanskrit for Green

I checked out www.hara.com website.  Not a whole let technically and how their service works.

Here is a video that works as a business decision maker presentation.

And consider their advisory board.

Hara Advisory Board

The Hara Advisory Board includes distinguished academics from leading universities who are experts in environmental science and technology. The Advisory Board brings an extraordinary depth of understanding and perspective to Hara in areas directly relevant to sustainable business practices.

Sam Chiu
  • Professor of Environmental Engineering, Stanford University
  • Expert on green supply chain and environmental operations
Arpad Horvath
  • Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering, UC Berkeley
  • Expert on carbon lifecycle analysis
Bob Pojasek
  • Professor of Environmental Science, Harvard University
  • Expert on pollution prevention and cleaner production
Ed Rubin
  • Professor of Environmental Engineering, Carnegie Mellon University
  • Winner of Nobel Peace Prize 2007

With John Doerr and the Kleiner Perkins backing the PR coverage is extensive.

New York Times

Expecting New Tax, Firm Prepares to Track Carbon

AMR Research

Hara: Cool Software For a Warm Planet

Triple Pundit

Hara: Resource Management for a Post-Carbon Economy

Los Angeles Times

'Clean-tech' start-ups are pushing the green button

IT Business Edge

Hara: Taking Green Efforts Mainstream

Business Week

U.S. Corporations Size Up Their Carbon Footprints

Fast Company

Hara Software Helps Large Organizations Make Small Footprints

CNET

Hara: Software for a carbon-constrained economy

The Register

Ex-SAP man joins Gore green crusade

earth2tech

Sustainable Software as a Service Hara Launches, Backed By Kleiner Perkins

AFP

Hara helps companies profit from being green

San Jose Mercury News

Hara unveils software to help with energy management

Forbes

The Business of Tracking Carbon

IDG

Green Tech Startup Pitches SaaS Energy Tool

Forbes

Energy Management Startup Hara Nabs Coke as Client, $6 Mil from Kleiner

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Users need More Data to Make Better Decisions, Energy Star for Computer Servers

The Energy Star Program Requirements for Computer Servers has been out for weeks, and HP just announced the first Energy Star Server.

HP gets a gold (Energy) Star

By Andy Patrizio on June 5, 2009 8:09 PM

HP is the first server vendor to earn an Energy Star Seal. A few weeks back, the EPA launched a program that would allow servers to slap an Energy Star logo on their servers, giving vendors some new bragging rights.
The EPA said the program would allow current models to meet the specs, because it designed the spec based on current technology, not something out in the future.
Well, HP is the first to earn Energy Star for Enterprise Servers. As of June 1, the ProLiant DL360 G6 1U model and three configurations of the DL360 G6 2U model get the star. No doubt Dell and IBM are working feverishly for their stars as well.

But, I held off on on blogging the release of the specification as there was plenty of media coverage.  I’ve had the pleasure of working with and getting to know the group of people who work on the energy star server specification, and we just met this last week to discuss where things are and what is next.

One of the questions I have been thinking about is why users should care of the specification. A simple approach is to use the idea of User Stories.

A user story is a software system requirement formulated as one or two sentences in the everyday or business language of the user. User stories are used with Agile software development methodologies for the specification of requirements (together with acceptance tests).

So, if you apply the user story idea to what the Energy Star program for computer servers.

'”As an enterprise consumer I need server performance and energy data to make decisions on what is the right server for our IT loads.”

As news.com reports.

The specification, which has been under development for a few years, is designed to give buyers a starting point for evaluating the energy-efficiency of servers, according to Andrew Fanara, a program manager for Energy Star at the Environmental Protection Agency.

It includes a common "power and performance data sheet" that reports energy data in a common format. Compliant products will also have relatively efficient power supplies, which means they will give off less waste heat.

Other criteria are the ability to report energy-related statistics to data center management software and relatively efficient idling, Fanara said.

Sounds like version 1.0 is a good step in the area of meeting consumer requirements of needing data. I don’t think it is nearly as important to have a energy star logo, as have data that is measured consistently across different servers.

How would you like it if car manufacturers weren’t forced by consumers to use numbers like MPG, HP, Torque ft-lbs, 0-60, lateral g, etc.

I think if the Energy Star group started it’s presentation with the story.

'”As an enterprise consumer I need server performance and energy data to make decisions on what is the right server for our IT loads.”

A lot more people would understand why it is a good thing.

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