Do Any Companies Power Down at Night? 646
An anonymous reader writes "My Health Sciences Campus has about 8,000 desktop computers, and on any given night about half of them are left on. I know this because I track all the MAC addresses in case there is a virus outbreak. Aside from the current fad of 'being green', has anyone had any success in encouraging users to power-down at night? You could potentially eliminate running bots, protect yourself from the next virus outbreak, keep your data safe, etc. Do security concerns and power consumption issues matter enough to do this?"
Aside from being green... (Score:2, Insightful)
And improved employee morale could result as well, since what would be the point of working late?
Re:Aside from being green... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Aside from being green... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Wake on LAN requires a magic packet, so browse list refreshes shouldn't be a problem. A PC directly connected to the internet might be wakeable if people send it a WoL packet, and I guess that's a fairly intelligent thing for a network scanner to do if you're looking to infect as many PCs as possible, but would probably be difficult.
From everyone's favourite almost-an-encyclopedia [wikipedia.org]:
The Magic Packet is a broadcast frame, transmitted over port 0 (Historically the most common port used), or 7 or 9 (becoming the most common ports used). It can be sent over a variety of connectionless protocols (UDP, IPX) but UDP is most commonly used. The data that is contained in a Magic Packet is the defined constant as represented in hexadecimal: FF FF FF FF FF FF followed by sixteen repetitions of the target computer's MAC address, possibly followed by a four or six byte password.
It's reasonably unlikely that any random traffic will happen to match this particular pattern. It's possible there's some r
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Re:Uh, Sleep Mode - shutdown? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Uh, Sleep Mode - shutdown? (Score:5, Informative)
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I've long had a habit of pressing the save shortcut after every change I make. A sentence just doesn't feel 'finished' until I've pressed the save key...
Re:Uh, Sleep Mode - shutdown? (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Aside from being green... (Score:5, Funny)
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viruses (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:viruses (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Create job to force automatic reboot or shutdow (Score:5, Insightful)
I suggest a simpler, low-tech solution - just stick up visible signs in the labs, and on some of the major office floors, asking people to shut down the computers in the evenings
Just the energy savings on that many computers would be not insignificant.
Re:Create job to force automatic reboot or shutdow (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Create job to force automatic reboot or shutdow (Score:5, Informative)
Two simple batch files for XP, on in the All Users startup directory, one in the All Users\Information Services directory of the start menu.
Startup:
AT
AT 18:00 "shutdown -t 600"
Abort:
Shutdown -a
We reset the AT table every day just in case some know-it-all high school student finds out such a thing exists and starts screwing with it. For the most part, though, not even the techs knew such a thing existed until I proposed using it.
We tried a lot of other ideas, but this is the simplest and most user-friendly. Big signs don't work, teachers and lab aids are no better than the students about following directions. Since implementing it 18 months ago, we've gone from having roughly 900 PCs online at night to about 100...including servers, timeclock systems running thinstation terminal sessions, and technology and admin workstations that are excepted from the shutdown policy.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
It should be noted that this is a public K-12 school, not a university. There aren't many people around at 6:00 outside of administration personnel. Those who are have been warned what will happen; if they get up at 5:58 to do whatever and come back seven minutes later to their PC shut down, they'd better have saved their work.
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If I were a taxpayer in your district, I would appreciate the savings on the school's electric bill.
Re:Create job to force automatic reboot or shutdow (Score:5, Insightful)
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because we're the ones who frequently have to drop what we're doing quickly and might forget to save an open document. We're also the ones most likely to work odd hours.
yeah, just like the councillors who are saying we need to get rid of parking spaces at workplaces, but not at the council offices as he needs to get to his constituency at a moment's notice.
You're focussed on yourself, I bet if you went out and asked the users you'd get a lot of replies around "yeah, the stupid thing tries to shut itself off just when you don't want it to".
Live by your own rules.
Re:Create job to force automatic reboot or shutdow (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Seriously. You need to take a couple of simple electrical courses. Specifically, volts-for-dolts a physics course on magnetism, and a practical, hands-on course working with electric motors. All handily part of an electrical engineering degree. When there is load on an electric generator, it takes more energy to keep it moving. Of course, we need to keep it moving at the same speed (60Hz or 50Hz, depending on which part of the world you're in) at all times, so that means using more coal, gas, whatever,
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You may find this interesting. I used to work at a nuclear power plant. The cooling reservoir was connected via a spillway to a nearby river. To cover peak loads, there was a hydroelectric plant on the spillway. At night, the power company I worked for bought tons of cheap electricity from another utility to run the hydro plant b
Re:Aside from being green... Just let them stay on (Score:5, Informative)
the power station does throttle down at night. they keep the generator at the same speed (3600RPM I guess, to give you 60Hz). but they don't need the same amount of fuel to keep it going. the usage on the grid acts like a brake on the generator, in the same way that the road conditions affect your bicycle.
if it's steam-based (gas, coal, nuclear), you need more steam to keep a higher pressure, to keep the generator rotating at the same speed, and that means heating more water, and more water needs more energy, and more energy needs more fuel. hydroelectric plants shut down unused turbines.
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Have you ever jump-started a car? Did you not notice how when you connect jumper cables to the vehicle with the dead battery, the running car has its engine get slogged down by the extra load? And does it not stand to reason that if you want to hold the engine at the same RPM (as an electric utility has to do to hold line frequency) you have to feed the engine more gas to do so?
If you dra
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Imagine if even 5% of computers in the US did this, we'd drop our carbon footprint drastically.
We power down at weekends (Score:4, Informative)
Re:We power down at weekends (Score:5, Insightful)
Surely you could use wake on lan to wake the machines then do your rollout 10 minutes later? Or do a patch install when the machine is turned on and connects to the domain controller?
In windows I'm sure you can set the time between warning appearing and shutdown ocuring. Give 600 seconds warning and you could probably shutdown 90% of the machines overnight.
Re:We power down at weekends (Score:4, Informative)
Well over half a million dollars if I did the math right.
Surely you could use wake on lan to wake the machines then do your rollout 10 minutes later? Or do a patch install when the machine is turned on and connects to the domain controller?
Unfortunately, this doesn't always work well. On some networks, the machines will auto-start up the moment they receive a packet, even if it isn't intended for them.
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We do this automatically eg automated.. If we do it while the non-admin user is signed on, many of these packages fail to install. Flash and others
Re:We power down at weekends (Score:5, Insightful)
You're assuming that 100% of machines in use are doing something interactive (and therefore have someone sat at them). This is frequently not the case.
Probably not that much (Score:3, Interesting)
There's also three other reasons to do it (Score:3, Informative)
Another along those lines is if you want a go
Re:We power down at weekends (Score:5, Interesting)
14*52*5*0.15*10000 = 5.460.000 Kwh of electric power, WORSE in the time when you use AC, because you'll need additional AC to get rid of that extra heat.
With average power-prices of 10 cent, you'll spend more than half a million dollar just paying for the electricity, in practice with AC and all you'll probably pay a million.
So, you saved $80K and wasted a million. Way to go !
Common wisdom (Score:2, Insightful)
Common wisdom (which may or may not be actual wisdom) suggests that powering up/down of computer power supplies is one of the largest sources of "wear" on computers nowadays, and so it's best to avoid that (replacing system components and increased costs in the industries to make this possible should be factored into eco-costs as well). Having systems go to sleep to various degrees presumably gets one much of the way towards b
Re:Common wisdom (Score:5, Insightful)
1: Power-cycling actually reduces the MTBF opposed to just leaving it on.
2: The reduced MTBF is lower than your company intends to keep the asset.
3: Cost-savings from the "increased" MTBF by leaving it on is greater than the electricity (+ increased A/C cost) cost to run those 300W power supplies all the time.
Of the ~6 computers I've had to failure, they all lasted far longer than even a five-year technology plan, AND did not fail due to simple wear and tear on the circuits. My anecdote isn't data, but it does make me question your conventional wisdom. (Especially since those PCs I know that are left on all the time don't have a significantly increased lifespan.)
Re:Common wisdom (Score:4, Interesting)
I never switch any of my systems off, and failures are extremely rare. I have all monitors and flat panels automatically power down, but I leave hard drives running continuously. About the only time I have to replace something is when I upgrade every few years. Yes, it adds a few dollars to my electric bill, but I save in other areas there, and it is worth the peace of mind.
Even fans (which are the weak link in most PCs) can run for ages if you spend the money to buy quality parts. It helps to have a good HEPA filter in your computer room, and keep the machines off the floor. Fans last a long time without dust in the bearings, and a dust-free computer runs cooler as well.
Re:Common wisdom (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Common wisdom (Score:5, Funny)
Preventing Infection? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
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Every power or network outage and mandatory-reboot Windows update, even overnight, usually causes maj
Good idea! (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Good idea! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Good idea! (Score:5, Funny)
Hibernate (Score:5, Insightful)
Really, there is no reason NOT to use the power management settings built into the OS.
Re:Hibernate (Score:5, Interesting)
It saved something like 33% power consumption (measured, before and after).
after midnight all desktops that are not in the excluded list hibernate automatically.
I used python + MFC . Was very easy and simple.
It is time for the Sysadmins start to program and make better use from the technology (not just, next-next-finish)..
And I didn't receive any raise besides saving a lot of money to University.
Shameless promotion: Looking for a new job in developed country.
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This [mvps.org] was the top result in Google when I searched for "windows remote power down API".
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Twice threaten by fire guns.
Being honest when everyone is "taking a good time"..
Voted, volunteer work..Teaching..
We can change places..
I dream when I may take a dinner and walk some quarters by night without fear..
Re:Hibernate (Score:5, Informative)
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Just remember to stagger start up on the machines, or you might trip a breaker.
Spinning down HDDs is not a good idea, at least on Windows. It tends to spin them back up after 1 minute anyway, causing constant stop/start cycling.
Re:Hibernate (Score:4, Funny)
Do you support wake-on-lan? (Score:5, Interesting)
Is there some security or other downside I'm not aware of? Is WOL not reliable?
Re:Do you support wake-on-lan? (Score:5, Interesting)
Another concern is whether your servers are up to handling all the PCs coming on at once in the morning. People leaving Outlook running at all times is actually a Good Thing for IT, cause the alternative of thousands of people hitting the Exchange servers at the same minute would kneel even the biggest distributed servers. Then there's similar concerns for the domain controllers, DHCP servers, proxy servers, or you have it. Leaving a substantial part of the machine park already logged in can save a lot of hardware and configuring.
If shutting everything down, at least a staggered start-up could be prudent.
Re:Do you support wake-on-lan? (Score:4, Informative)
I'm going to roll this out to our admin network computers as well. We are really saving noticable amounts of money, because not only are the machines not powered, but the AC doesn't have to run to keep the rooms cooled. THe only glitch I have ran into is when I need to push out updates to all computers, and some were not turned on that day. In the late afternoon, I use WOL to wake up all computers on campus.
Why power down? (Score:2, Informative)
Machines are woken from sleep to deploy updates, etc. Many of our desktops are able to accumulate 30 days of uptime before the next patchday.
Energy consumption is a non-issue. We don't pay much for electricity.
The rest of the infrastructure - printers, faxes, access points, etc. runs
Re:Why power down? (Score:4, Insightful)
Reducing energy consumption isn't just about saving money, it's about not fucking up the planet too.
Re:Why power down? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Why power down? (Score:4, Insightful)
News for ya... (Score:2)
"Health Sciences Campus" sounds like at least a few hundred of those are grad students and postdocs chained to their desks by their PIs...
I'm not sure whether your definition of "powering-down" includes sleep; it seems like reasonable default (or unchangeable) power settings should be adequate to address your concerns. Admittedly, that's easier done in a company than in the free-for-all of aca
scripted per department (Score:2, Interesting)
Ping? (Score:2)
-Peter
Increased probability of HDD failure (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Increased probability of HDD failure (Score:5, Interesting)
There are also other benefits. A harddrive that has motors or bearings that are starting to fail can be caught when they have trouble spinning up and be replaced before they totally fail, preventing data loss. Furthermore, if a head crash occurs when no one is around (during the night or the weekend), having the the heads banging and grinding against the platters for hours or days is really going to hamper any recovery efforts.
We have power down at night policy (Score:5, Insightful)
It took about 6 months before we were at a realistic level. We have 633 desktops on our site so there is normally always a valid reason for one or two to be left on (valid reasons being batch copy, verify or processing of files). For those interested we have had a reduction in the amount of equipment failure (HDD mainly) as well as pretty good cost savings for power. Not to mention running greener (which regardless of if you believe in global warming or not is good).
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Re:We have power down at night policy (Score:5, Informative)
Power vs. operational (Score:5, Insightful)
I tend to leave the computer on overnight, but with things like monitor power-down and CPU idling enabled. When it's not doing anything it drops about 90% of it's power consumption after 15 minutes, and even when working with the monitor off (eg. running the nightly backup) it's still running at less than 50% of full power. If I power it off, by comparison, it can't run it's virus scan, backup, update check and the like overnight and has to do those things while I'm trying to use it during the day. Plus there's wear and tear to consider, I've noticed that the office computers that get turned off and on every day tend to fail and need replacing several times before mine (that stays on all the time) has a failure.
So my preference is to leave computers running but with power-saving features set to minimize power without shutting things down. This means hard drives continue to spin but the CPU goes into low-power idle mode. The monitor goes to suspend mode (beam and deflection power is off but the circuits and coils are kept warm), not powered-down completely. That seems to be the best balance between reducing power consumption, allowing it to run maintenance operations overnight and minimizing wear and tear and thermal stress on the components. If management absolutely insists on ignoring those last two in favor of the first, wake-on-LAN is essential to allow nightly maintenance to happen.
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The idea of turning off a machine is an old and out of date idea. Power management build into machines is now quite good. Another consideration is that commercial machines, at least, hit a central server on startup, and if every
Re:Power vs. operational (Score:5, Insightful)
Also, for the love of god, get an LCD. Modern LCDs are leaps and bounds better than CRTs in every way, especially power consumption. And they're dirt cheap too.
Re:Power vs. operational (Score:4, Insightful)
So long as that CRT still works, it's better for the environment just to keep using it. The added electricity usage is far less than the energy and environmental costs of properly disposing of that CRT monitor, not to mention the environmental and energy costs of producing the replacement LCD.
Re:Power vs. operational (Score:4, Insightful)
Your point #1 is false, I'm afraid. Yes, the components were designed to work over a wide temperature range. The problem is the change. Gradual or not, components made of different materials expand and contract at different rates as temperature changes. As long as the temperature stays steady, regardless of what that steady temperature is, there's no problem. But if it's changing, even slowly, then the different materials want to change size relative to each other. That produces stress. You can see this in the thermostat that controls your home's heating and cooling. It's made of strips of 2 metals with drastically different thermal expansion ratios bonded together. As the temperature changes, the bimetallic strip physically warps. The same thing happens inside every chip and solder joint in your computer every time it warms up or cools down. And eventually those joins start to crack apart. That does two things. First, it increases the electrical resistance of the joint. Higher resistance = more heat. Second, it disrupts the thermal transfer from the chips themselves into their carriers by disrupting the tight physical contact between them. So now the chips aren't being cooled quite as well, and at the same time they're running hotter internally. All that turns into a shorter lifespan.
As for #2, not anymore. That surge effect's confined to the power supply itself. It still affects the PSU, but no worse than normal power-line noise will. The big effect is actually on the drive motors and bearings. Stopped, the bearings settle a bit. When the platters are spun up, it takes a moment for the bearings to lift up on their film of lubricant again. One cycle like that puts as much wear on the bearings as many hours of steady spinning. And the power cost of keeping a drive spinning is minimal. Think about spinning a wheel, which is all the drive's platters are. It takes a fair amount of effort to start a heavy wheel spinning and get it up to speed, but once it's going it takes very little effort to keep it spinning at that speed. It's enough on my large drives that I can actually see the spike in power draw at the wall socket when a drive is spun up from a dead stop.
When people comment about how their machines aren't having problems, I'm often a bit skeptical. I've had quite a few people ask me for help with a computer that "just started having problems a few days ago". When I throw my hardware diagnostic program at it, I get a veritable flood of red malfunction and error indications. On the last one, "Every now and then it won't boot, and occasionally a program dies for no reason." turned into having to replace the motherboard and all the RAM (every stick of memory had at least 2 bad columns, and the EIDE controller was fried and corrupting data during large DMA transfers) and restore the entire system from original media and backups (losing about 10% of the data in the process, the backups didn't go back far enough to contain uncorrupted copies of the files).
I used to turn my machine off at night ... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I used to turn my machine off at night ... (Score:5, Informative)
Me too!
In any cases, I always leave my computer (a laptop) on during the week. I shut it off on weekends, but due to the software inventory tracker and the required anti-virus scans, I always leave the machine on during the week so that I can actually use it during the day.
The real problem is that the anti-virus scan is so slow that it takes a good three hours. The inventory scan is somewhat better, and only takes about an hour. In both cases, the machine drags to near unusable levels while the scan is running. Given that it's a dual-core machine, this is really a testament to just how screwed up Window's I/O scheduling is - both involve lots of file reads, which apparently causes Windows to drag to a crawl.
Not to mention that hibernate and to a lesser degree suspend appear to not work well with certain drivers on my system. Using hibernate kills the wireless drivers, which isn't a horribly big deal when I can physically plug the system in but it does mean that I just shut the thing off when roaming about, since I'll have to reboot anyway.
But it's that three-hour IT required virus scan that keeps me leaving the machine running nights. That's a real productivity killer during the day. Fortunately it's only scheduled to run once a week.
The inventory app, on the other hand, runs daily for some reason.
Why not use standby? (Score:2)
Wake on LAN (Score:2)
I have been told they turn off overnight in Japan (Score:3, Interesting)
This box had variable voltage power supples which required me to adjust them from cold start. I had to calibrate A/D, take samples, tweak, etc all through JTAG and cumulatively it was quite slow. Like over an hour.
My manager was not impressed, I shrugged and said "who turns these off?" - and the marketing droid/product manager said "they do in Japan". Fine. The hardware people were nice enough to give me multiple JTAG lines and power up time shrank to acceptable limits.
I have never been certain if this was a "Spinal Tap" riff or it was really true.
Studies? (Score:2)
Waste not, want not.. (Score:5, Interesting)
Then one day, they sent out a campus-wide email telling people to leave their computers on all night and over the weekend. They used the CPU cycles to run high-performance scientific computing jobs, saving the cost of buying a supercomputer.
Of course, not every company has a need for spare CPU cycles. This place did a lot of protein-shape searches etc..
workstations by day, cluster by night (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:workstations by day, cluster by night (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes, but not strictly enforced (Score:5, Informative)
Yes and no.
When I first got comfortable in my current job, I made a big push toward "greening" our IT resources. As one obvious (erroneously, as I'll explain in a sec) step in this, I convinced most of my users to shut down at night. If we need to push out updates, WOL works just fine for turning machines on a couple hours before the start of the day, and it doesn't impact anyone during working hours.
Then I learned how electric billing actually works for commercial users - Put simply, your company doesn't care if machines stay on all night, because they pay based on their peak load, which will always occur during normal business hours. I had applied ideas that make perfect sense at home, to an environment where they don't apply.
Now, that doesn't mean we should just leave machines on 24/7 - Using electricity has an an environmental aspect in addition to the monetary cost. But if it inconveniences users by more than a few seconds every day, any conservation efforts will actually cost the company money in the long run.
So, I still encourage my users to shut down, and 95% comply. But if they consider it too much of a hassle, I can't financially justify forcing them to spend the first minute of the work day waiting for their machine to boot (not that anyone really works for the first five to ten minutes of the day, between coffee, hitting the bathroom, and just getting the obligatory morning socializing out of the way).
As for the security aspect of this, the servers must run 24/7, and any attacker would target them rather than some random user's desktop. I don't worry about an attacker using a compromised desktop as an intermediate step to the servers, because the desktops have no more privileges on them than anything else inside the firewall (and even then, not much more than a totally untrusted source, except for nonconfidential shared resources that we could restore in a matter of minutes if necessary).
Overnight tasks (Score:5, Informative)
With many enterprise management tools, such as Zenworks, it's quite simple to schedule a wake-on-lan task to wake computers up at say, 6am, to perform their daily tasks. It can even be configured to push out an automatic reimage of the machine. Once the updates and scans are done by 7am, people are just beginning to come into the office, yet you've still had a whole 10 hours of downtime. Incidentally, I've not seen a single computer in the past 4 years that doesn't support WoL on the mainboard NIC. Big bucks enterprise manglement apps aren't even required. A simple cron job, and some wakelan/ether-wake/wakeonlan/Net::Wake magic will do it for free. Just gather a list of Mac addresses with ettercap or your friendly ARP table or asset management app/spreadsheet.
May will say that the bandwidth requirements of updates squeezed into the 6am to 7am slot will degrade systems, but that's where a background process such as BITS [wikipedia.org] should be used (as demonstrated by Eve Online, Zenworks, Microsoft and Google). The virus updates are a minor bandwidth requirement if you have suitable leaf services, and the actual scan is only locally intensive.
Being a public sector organisation, we're working towards a greener profile (due to govt policies), and all the tools are there and working. It just needs some effort on the part of the administrators.
Tool to do this The Right Way from the EPA (Score:5, Informative)
Unfortunately the EPA's EZ GPO page seems to have gone poof or something recently, but you can get it here. [terranovum.com]
Basically, you push a (simple) msi to the machines (I do this a lot of the time via psexec [microsoft.com] (props to Mark Russinovich) but there are other methods. Once you have that running on the machine you can configure how you want your machines to behave/re power management:
We also have a script that runs at midnight a few days of the month that does the magic packet thing as has been mentioned so WSUS and/or SMS (or SC:CM) can do their thing and automatic updates run as normal. In a few "why does my machine have to boot up every day this sucks" user groups we have a scheduled job to send magic packets about 15 minutes before they arrive to wake up their machines. With hybernate they hardly know anything happened.
Some scientists need their computers on (Score:3, Informative)
I'm certain there are other sciences that have similar concerns. I think the best way is to send out a friendly e-mail reminding people to turn off their computers when they leave. That should get at least a handful of computers off for the night. Depending on how successful or unsuccessful that strategy is, shutting off computers that are definitely unnecessary (public access terminals for example) would be a fine idea.
Personal experience with 3300 PCs (Score:3, Interesting)
We used to leave all our PCs on all the time in order to run updates, patches etc.
In my area of operations there are only about 3300 PCs. Nine months ago we implemented a policy where all users were required to turn off their PCs (not servers) at the end of day. Wake-on-LAN was used to turn the PCs on during the night for updates and 15 minutes before the start of the workday.
Very conservatively, we estimate that we will save about EUR153000 (USD225000) every year (I live in a country with very high electricity rates).
So, it is definitely worth it financially, our users were not adversely affected at all and it helped morale by making the workplace a greener place.
Wow! (Score:3, Informative)
Answer: force them to power down (Score:3, Informative)
Interestingly, our network guys are having trouble routing wake on lan packets accross subnets, so we are looking at a T104 form factor linux appliences with multiple nics to send out WOL commands. Not sure this isn't a brain fart on the part of the network guys, or simply a limitation on how WOL works. Since we have other reasons for wanting a boxen on each network, it's a good excuse.
Why bother "encouraging" them? Force them! (Score:3, Interesting)
Push out an update to disable screen savers, turn monitors off after 15 minutes of inactivity, and hibernate after 1.5 hours of inactivity (this saves them from having to boot up after lunch), and set Windows to require administrative privileges to change power management settings.
Piece of cake. If they run Linux s/Windows/Linux above.
Re:Easy fix (Score:4, Interesting)
You might be able to set up an "exception" ticket with the IT department, or set up a Magic Packet [wikipedia.org] arrangement tied to their machine.
Re:Easy fix (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Easy fix (Score:4, Insightful)
Encouraging people to pull all nighters or work on weekends smacks of an inefficient workforce or ineffective management. The only times people should be working those hours are because a job sprang up last minute due to an act of god or because the work requires that it be done when people aren't around. And in those cases if you've got on sight IT, it shouldn't be that difficult to set up an arrangement to cope with that. If you're going to have work done nights and weekends anyway, you may as well just outsource things to another timezone, and that's frequently a cost saving thing anyways.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
No, a properly managed company would allow users to work when they want to the greatest extent possible. Don't assume that everyone prefers the same hours you do.
And for most positions, there's no need to make each physical box remotely accessible to allow people to work whenever and wherever they like, just a remote home directory for each user.
Back on topic, I think users can be given some input; the key is to make them think about the issue. Run a script that asks each user when his or her PC should
Re:The Green fad, is just that... marketing nonsen (Score:5, Informative)
I work for Dell. I can tell you for a fact that we take the environment seriously. The building I work in houses a 24/7 call center, but certain areas of the building are not 24/7. Corporate sales for the country are here, and take up half of the 3rd floor, for example. I happen to be in the sales department myself, and there's a piece of software installed on every desktop that hibernates the computer at 20:30 EST (with a half-hour countdown to that point). My department shuts down at 19:00, no other sales department is open past 20:00. We all open at 08:00 the next day, and the automatic hibernation sets an alarm to wake up the computer at 07:45. Alternately, if you turn your own system off through the start button and shut down, it'll stay off until you turn it back on.
We've also got computer recycling programs in place, and the "plant a tree" initiative where you can have us plant a tree for every computer you buy.
Sure. Some companies don't take going green seriously. But some do. And the number of companies that are taking it seriously is growing. Besides which, every little bit helps. Do you know the amount of energy that could be saved if everybody unplugged those electronic devices that "sleep" when they're not being used? 2W doesn't sound like much, until you multiply it by half a billion devices.