Posts Tagged ‘sun microsystems’

OpenEco Energy Camp

openeco2.jpgWhat do you get you when you put four experts in a San Francisco energy camp called OpenEco 2008? You get something between a bar brawl and poetry recital. Actually the opening segment for yesterday’s Sun Microsystems sponsored-UCSF based-camp began with Dave Douglas, VP of Eco Responsibility at Sun Microsystems leading a spirited discussion panel of L. Hunter Lovins (tough to miss in her black cowboy hat), president and founder of Natural Capitalism Solutions; Ted Nordhaus, Chairman of the Breakthrough Institute; Michael Shellenberger, President of the Breakthrough Institute; and Adam Werbach, Founder and CEO of Act Now.

Even when you get a panel of so-called experts, there tends to be disagreements. In fact, when asked about all the controversy among what to do about the energy crisis and sustainability and alt energy Adam Werbach blurted, “First thing that we need to do is to kill all the experts,” which got a laugh but also made a good point. Lovins showed some lovin’ for her case that innovation comes with healing. In her case, she argued that investing in sustainability rather than armies would work in places like Afghanistan where she’s off to teach, not how to shoot an M-16 but of course, sustainability. Like political pundits, the talk shifted to taxes (like a carbon tax) versus subsidies. We, like most of the crowd pondered the thought of adding a “carbon tax” to various products and services. But we all know how much this country loves its taxes. But then what about subsidies? It’s no shock that dirty energy like coal and oil look relatively cheap because of the subsidies. Green foodie Michael Pollen of Omnivore’s Dilemma fame, dedicated numerous book pages talking about corn and soy subsidies, and here the group and audience did the same. That subsidized corn ends up as high fructose corn syrup in so many cheap processed foods. We don’t see any spinach subsidies. Balance the energy scale. We think that it’s time for more Green energy subsidies (not just solar). People don’t want their dirty energy taxed so we need to make clean energy cheap.

“Energy Camp” Features Hunter Lovins, Adam Werbach, and More…

openeco.JPGMeant to get this one published much earlier in the week… life (or, more appropriately, administrative tasks) does (do) get in the way…:P

Today, at UC-San Francisco’s Conference Center, Sun Microsystems will be hosting OpenEco.org’s “Energy Camp,” a free one-day event that focuses on bringing together environmental leaders and software developers to discuss “coding for the environment.” Speakers will include L. Hunter Lovins, Adam Werbach, Ted Nordhaus and Michael Shellenberger. The event begins at 9 am [...]

Daily Tip: Easy Steps Towards a Greener Office

Being environmentally conscious at the workplace can be a challenge, especially if your employer is resistant or doesn’t readily see the economic benefits of going green. However, on the flip side, many employees aren’t doing all they can either. By taking a few simple steps each day, everyone in the office can do their part to help the company become more eco-friendly.

A recent survey found that 73% of people believe it [...]

Green Tech Spotlight: Water Cooled Server Cabinet System

Panduit Corp released a new Net-Access Server Cabinet System that features IBM’s Rear Door Heat Exchanger Water-Cooling Technology. It uses a five-inch deep cooling door that uses chilled water to dissipate heat generated from the servers. It does not utilize any other cooling system and can reduce server heat output by up to 55%.

Water cooling has existed for desktops for a while now, but has not been used in the server environment.

[...]

10 Fast, Easy Tips to Cool Your Company

According to the US Department of Energy, businesses and industries consume more than twice the amount of power as residents in states such as California. As a California company of 35,000 employees, Sun Microsystems is one of those companies that play a big part in power consumption. The power consumptions from datacenters have doubled between 2000 and 2005 and many of those datacenter have Sun Microsystems servers. Sun Microsystems has realized that it has been a

[...]

Advertisement