back to article Storage sector needs to think greener

Fingernail biting over the cost of storage power and cooling hasn't reached the epoch haunting the server space, but it's headed that way. The green bandwagon is departing, and it's high time for storage managers to jump aboard, according to Microsoft senior manager SW Worth. "A lot of focus on green computing is on servers …

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  1. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    DC Power

    Our company operates 7 (collapsing some as we go) datacenters currently. The problem we are facing with DC is actually getting equipment that runs on it. In a commodity server model, try and find a Tier 1 vendor who's building a server that'll run without a honking AC power supply in it. HP and IBM need to step up and start offering this, then we'll get somewhere.

  2. Anonymous Coward
    Flame

    Re: DC Power

    Dell is a tier 1 vendor and they offer DC powered servers. Give them a call.

    In my opinion, DC power doesn't get you to where you need to be. It just pushes the problem elsewhere. The article is correct in highlighting other areas of the DC that suck down power. Servers are going to be about 25% of the power draw. Everything else in the DC (including the storage, but also CRAC etc.) will also have a bearing on the DC's efficiency.

    The article is also correct when it mentions that it is foolhardy to build DC's in power-expensive states. Why people need to invest in raised-floor real estate in NYC, Northern NJ and down-town SF is quite beyond me.

  3. Raheim Sherbedgia

    Washington DC Data Centers

    DC is not a state.

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