Navy's Green Data Center opens

The Navy had a ribbon cutting ceremony for its latest data center to support consolidation of 100 data centers.

The Department of the Navy's Chief Information Officer Terry Halvorsen and Dave Weddel, assistant deputy Chief of Naval Operations for Information Dominance, were keynote speakers at the ribbon-cutting event.

"This data center will be part of the Navy's data center consolidation effort. Not only is this data center efficient, it's green. That is another big piece of what we want to do. We need to protect the environment and the resources that we have. This data center will help us do that," said Halvorsen, who is the Navy's senior official on matters related to information management, information technology/cyberspace and information resources management. He is also the Department of the Navy's lead for IT/cyberspace efficiency.

Green data center is mentioned as part of the speech by Navy Officers.  Who would have thought that a Navy CIO would make points on how green his data center is?

Even thought LEED is mentioned most likely the largest green contribution is shutting down the 100 other data centers.

Construction began on the 20,220-square-foot facility on Joint Base Charleston-Weapons Station Oct. 15, 2010 and was recently completed. The $9.498 million data center was designed to the United States Green Building Council's Leadership in Environmental and Energy Design silver rating standard.

The Navy's data center consolidation initiative will provide cost-savings due to reductions in physical locations, power and data center management contracts.

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06:30 GMT, October 10, 2011 CHARLESTON, S.C. | SPAWAR Systems Center Atlantic unveiled a new data center that will play a key role in consolidating more than 100 Navy data centers to increase effectiveness and efficiency and to reduce costs while still meeting the Navy's security and operational requirements, Oct. 7.

Netflix, Cancels Qwikster, let's see what else they change like the price

I just got this e-mail announcing NO QWIKSTER.

Let's see if Netflix takes the next step and changes their pricing.  They say they won't.  I have my Amazon Prime account and Amazon Kindle Fire on order.

Do people trust the Netflix team?

They say they are committed to making Netflix the best.

Netflix

Dear David,

It is clear that for many of our members two websites would make things more difficult, so we are going to keep Netflix as one place to go for streaming and DVDs.

This means no change: one website, one account, one password…in other words, no Qwikster.

While the July price change was necessary, we are now done with price changes.

We're constantly improving our streaming selection. We've recently added hundreds of movies from Paramount, Sony, Universal, Fox, Warner Bros., Lionsgate, MGM and Miramax. Plus, in the last couple of weeks alone, we've added over 3,500 TV episodes from ABC, NBC, FOX, CBS, USA, E!, Nickelodeon, Disney Channel, ABC Family, Discovery Channel, TLC, SyFy, A&E, History, and PBS.

We value you as a member, and we are committed to making Netflix the best place to get your movies & TV shows.

Respectfully,

The Netflix Team



The opposite of the Amazon Kindle Fire, your Cable HD Set Top box

The Amazon Kindle Fire is getting lots of news, and part of the excitement is storing your content in the cloud, and not on the device.  But, let's be clear, much of the content that will be stored will simply be a small unique identifier that says  you have rights to a book, music, or movie.  Storing, thousands of copies of the same MP3 music file in individual could accounts is wasteful and costly.  Store one copy and point to the copy in individual accounts is a greener way.

Look at a device that is in millions of homes consuming as much power as a refrigerator, your cable STB.

The Natural Resources Defense Council has conducted a study that places the spotlight on how inefficient cable boxes and DVR's are in American homes.

These boxes, which guide cable signals and digital recording capacity into televisions, run at a constant rate and can utilize more power than a new refrigerator or air conditioning unit.

There are millions of these STBs.

According to the study, there are 160 million set-top boxes in the U.S., and this number is increasing. These boxes run 24 hours per day, even when they're not being used. The study found that add-on DVR's use an additional 40 percent more power than the set-top box.

The Natural Resources Defense Council found that these boxes consume $3 billion in electricity per year in the U.S., and 66 percent of this power is drained when no one is even using it. Also, one high definition cable box and one high definition DVR use about 446 kilowatt-hours per year, which is 10 percent more than a 21-cubic-foot refrigerator that is energy efficient.

Maybe the Amazon Kindle Fire will gradually replace the cable STB.  It is a much more energy efficient and storage efficient device.

The cable industry has pushed the STB a high energy cost to the consumer.  Turning off the power to STB is a pain as turning it on means the device needs to reload the channel content which can take an hour.  Doesn't this sound like an Enterprise IT solution?  a monopoly?

An energy efficient green data center changes your strategy.  Think of what the cable providers have vs. what Amazon has.

Think Different in the Data Center, change the world

I just spent 2 great days in Chicago at Data Center Dynamics, Lee Tech on Tap, Touring 601 Polk with Facility Gateway, and eating lunch at the best deli in Chicago with Jim Kerrigan. On Thursday it was announced Steve Jobs had passed away, and my wife text me that she was quite sad watching the news on TV with daughter.  I wrote a brief tribute to Steve Jobs here.

Apple is a company everyone knows, yet few think of it as a 35 year old company.

1976 - High-school buddies Steven Wozniak and Steve Jobs start Apple Computer. Their first product, Apple I, built in circuit board form, debuts at "the Homebrew Computer Club" in Palo Alto, California.

I joined Apple in 1985 and stayed until 1992, working with some great people who are good friends and some of the smartest people I know to work on some innovative data center ideas.  None of us worked on data center back then, but we drifted through companies like Microsoft, Adobe, and Google working on innovative products.

The Think Different campaign is a classic.  And, one of the points made is people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world, are the ones who do.

I hadn't been to Chicago in a year, and I had hopes it would be worth the trip.

After two days, I can say it exceeded my expectations.  Why?  Because I met people who want to change the data center world, and they are passionate about doing things in a better way.  I won't name the specific list of people, because the status quo in data centers is you don't say anything that gets published unless the marketing department has given you approval.  Do you think Apple PR ever told Steve Jobs what he should say?

Can you find the innovative people?  I did in Chicago.  I am off to LV next week for an IT Asset Management Conference, and there are group of getting together there.  At the end of month I'll be in NYC, and be at Facebook's Open Compute Summit with another innovative group.  November I'll be at 7x24 Exchange in Phoenix with lots of smart innovative people.

What is going to revolutionize data centers are people doing what is in the above video.  Creating solutions that change how data centers work.

My Tribute to Steve Jobs, Thanks for creating One of the Best Companies To Learn How to Change the World

My college education is from UC Berkeley, and normally people think of their education in college.  But, I have always treated my jobs as education, a place of learning. When I was in college I aspired to work at IBM, Xerox PARC, or HP.  After 5 years at HP, i went to Apple for an interview to check out this small computer manufacturer (compared to HP) in 1984.  Apple made me a job offer, but I was too busy working on a  project at HP to leave.  Luckily 6 months later after i finished the project, Apple called me back and wanted to see if I was still interested.  The Macintosh had shipped, and I was ready to move to a new place of learning.

At Apple, I changed jobs every year, learning new things, solving tough problems, and understanding a different way to think about product development. At Apple there was a passion to change the world.  Be Different.  How much of corporate life is the opposite?  Fit in. Do as your told.  Hit your metrics.  Defend the status quo.

How many companies have in their DNA, we are going to create products no one else has.

I left Apple back in 1992, during the dark years when Steve was not at the company.  When Steve returned, I would tell people Steve came back because there was no stage like Apple for Steve to perform his magic.  He had been busy at Next and Pixar, but Apple was his brand.

Steve will go down in history as one of the great innovators.  But, unlike his predecessors, he last left a company that teaches people to change the world by creating great products.  People will remember Steve for the products he created and the list is long.

But, I think Steve's greatest achievement is creating one of the best companies to learn how to change the world.

(Below is my last business card at Apple on top of my latest purchase, a MacBook Air.)

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