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The Greening of IT: How Companies Can Make a Difference for the Environment

Product ID : 16028507


Galleon Product ID 16028507
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About The Greening Of IT: How Companies Can Make A

Product Description The Greening of IT offers clear, business-focused coverage of both the benefits and roadblocks of moving to green IT. Lamb discusses internal organizational obstacles, as well as regulations, energy cost shifts, and utility rate incentives that can help companies move towards green IT. You'll find specific how-to guidance on everything from measuring energy usage and optimizing data center cooling equipment through leveraging virtualization. Lamb also presents detailed, up-to-the minute green IT case studies - including utilities, universities, and companies of all sizes, worldwide. He concludes by previewing emerging trends in green IT and identifying "on the horizon" opportunities businesses should be monitoring and preparing for. From the Back Cover How IT Can Drive Immense Business Value by “Going Green”   For CEOs, CIOs, CFOs, and IT leaders: The green IT business case and best practices for making it happen Timely help for companies facing rising energy costs, new government rules, and growing public concern Powerful new insights from IBM’s breakthrough $1 billion green computing initiative   Chances are your enterprise IT organization has a significant carbon footprint. In an era of unpredictable energy costs, reducing energy usage throughout your data centers and IT infrastructure represents a powerful cost-cutting opportunity. Now, a top green IT expert shows business and IT leaders how to drive powerful business value by improving IT’s environmental performance.   Drawing on leading-edge experience, John Lamb helps you realistically assess the business case for green IT, set priorities, and overcome the internal and external challenges to making it work. He offers proven solutions for issues ranging from organizational obstacles to executive motivation and discusses crucial issues ranging from utility rate incentives to metrics. Along the way, you’ll discover energy-saving opportunities―from virtualization and consolidation to cloud and grid computing―and solutions that will improve business flexibility as they reduce environmental impact.   Lamb presents case studies, checklists, and more―all the practical guidance you need to drive maximum bottom-line value from your green IT initiative.   Preface     xxiii Acknowledgments     xxix About the Author     xxxiii Chapter 1: The Importance of Green IT     1 Chapter 2: The Basics of Green IT     15 Chapter 3: Collaboration Is Key for Green IT     39 Chapter 4: The Government’s Role–Regulation and EPA Activity     55 Chapter 5: The Magic of “Incentive”–The Role of Electric Utilities     69 Chapter 6: A Most-Significant Step–“Virtualizing” Your IT Systems     85 Chapter 7: The Need for Standard IT Energy-Use Metrics     109 Chapter 8: What About Chillers, Cooling Tower Fans, and All That Cooling Equipment Usually Ignored by IT?     129 Chapter 9: Green IT Case Studies for Energy Utilities     147 Chapter 10: Green IT Case Studies for Universities and a Large Company     157 Chapter 11: Worldwide Green IT Case Studies     183 Chapter 12: The Future of Green IT for Corporations     205 Appendix A: Green IT Checklist and Recommendations     215 Appendix B: Green IT and Cloud Computing     237 Appendix C: Comparison of Different Power-Generation Methods     251 Appendix D: Worldwide Electricity Costs for IT with Projections     281 Glossary     289 Bibliography     301 Index     305   About the Author John Lamb is a Senior Technical Staff Member for IBM Global Business Services in Somers, New York. He is an IBM Senior Certified IT Architect, and he holds a B.A. degree from the University of Notre Dame and a Ph.D. in engineering science from the University of California at Berkeley. He is a senior member of the IEEE and ASME engineering societies. He has published more than 50 technical papers and articles and has coauthored four books, including Lotus Notes®  and Domino®  5: Scalable Network Design (McGraw-Hill, 1999) and IBM WebSphere® and L