BM Seer Unofficial thoughts from an anonymous Sun employee

Idle servers are the devil's watt guzzlers

Wednesday Jun 04, 2008

Servers are very different than laptops, DUH! Therefore one must benchmark power in a very different way. We all know that laptops spend lots of time at low utilisation or idle (waiting for your input). Most servers should not be used at idle or anywhere near idle. Kick out any vendor that only wants to show watt savings at low utilisation, they are trying to get you to take your eye of the real truth.

In the good ol' wasteful days of yore, you could have your servers running at 20%, drive your huge SUV alone down the block to pick up buy an incandescent bulbs.

Today, you need to lower your costs and carbon footprint by turning off wasteful low-utilised servers, buying efficient servers and running them in at least an efficient part of the power curve, say 50-60% util or more.

Demand that every vendor add power measurement to every benchmark right now! I fear many are redesigning benchmarks to add power only to emphasize low utilisation. In my opinion (I speak for myself not necessarily Sun), low utilisation measurements are just smoke and mirrors and disinformation. As I pointed out last week you can save many times more watts per unit of work by just raising your utilisation a bit.

Why do I mention this which appears obvious...

This morning I had breakfast with a friend. Always enjoyable catching up with friends. He mentioned that a customer of his wanted to make buying power decisions "based on the idle watts of a server"!?! The customer was prompted to ask that by a vendor. After a realistic conversation continued the customer now feels completely mislead by the other vendor. , you lost.

Now off to a tasty lunch...

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Saving money going green with T2000

Tuesday Jan 09, 2007

"Power is now 6% to 7% of datacentre costs compared to 1% a few...years ago,” Ken Harvey CIO of HSBC.

So HSBC is looking at a variety of ways to save money, one of those is implementing with the Sun Fire T2000.

    "Any savings on power consumption will have an immediate financial gain for the bank. HSBC is rolling out Sun T2000 servers, which are said to deliver up to three times the throughput at 30% less power and cooling costs compared to alternative server hardware."
you can read more in the Computer Weekly article 4-Jan-07: http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2007/01/04/220980/how-to-make-money-by-going-green.htm

It is important to note that at high utilisation and with lots of memory the Sun Fire T2000 out-distances the Woodcrest-based systems and others by a lot, see previous blog entries on that in this "Wattage-Power" category.

Expect more news on the Sun Fire T2000 later today... :)

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