08 Nov 2006
One of the hassles of trying to take a green, or at least energy-efficient, approach to buying IT hardware is the time-consuming necessity to read through complex technical specs to discover appropriate components.
Dell is to offer a shortcut through that process by tagging such components so that buyers can select configurations without ploughing through details of performance-per-watt, thermal characteristics and so on. It expects to have configurations ready next month.
“An organisation’s green footprint is a boardroom issue and from there a front-of-mind IT issue,” said Hugh Jenkins, Dell UK enterprise manager.
“One of the things we’re looking at is offering configurations of ‘green machines’ so if a customer chooses that configuration they would know it’s the absolute best we could do. We’re still kicking around [branding to identify these configurations] but the message will be all around energy efficiency.”
It’s an interesting move but it could put IT buyers in a quandary as optimal configurations usually still demand a bigger power envelope. Vendors that market their green credentials are, therefore, often asking buyers to trade off performance for low power demands.
LATEST STORIES ABOUT IT
YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
LATEST JOBS
TODAY'S TOP STORIES
HIGHLIGHT
The best green companies in the UK should be preparing their entries for annual BusinessGreen Leaders Awards
INSIGHT
INSIGHT
The science and practical application of an improved method for the specification of power and cooling infrastructure for data centres
A look at alternative approaches to managing energy for cost and/or sustainability reasons in data centres
WHAT DO YOU THINK? Add your comment