Meeting-20110409: Difference between revisions
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== Meeting Staff == |
== Meeting Staff == |
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If you would like to volunteer to assist with this meeting, please add your name to one or more of the [[MeetingChecklist|categories]] below. |
If you would like to volunteer to assist with this meeting, please add your name to one or more of the [[MeetingChecklist|categories]] below. |
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* Host: |
* Host: Terry Golightly Vice Chair Wplug |
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* Co-Host: Your name here |
* Co-Host: Your name here |
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* Donuts/Bagels: Your name here |
* Donuts/Bagels: Your name here |
Revision as of 00:54, 6 April 2011
WPLUG will have a General User Meeting and presentation on Saturday, April 9, 2011, starting at 2pm in the auditorium (bottom floor) of the Wilkins School Community Center.
Schedule for the Day
1:30pm - Doors open, set up
2:00pm - Business Meeting starts
2:30pm - Featured Presentation
3:30pm - Meeting ends, everyone out. We are likely to go to D's 6pack or Square Cafe for lunch.
Speaker/Presentation
Name: Timo Mechler
One Paragraph Bio: James R. Swartz Entrepreneurial Fellow at Carnegie Mellon University’s Tepper School of Business 2010 Graduated 2010 MBA. Master’s degree in electrical engineering from Purdue University in 2008. Bachelor’s degree in Computer Science, Mathematics, and Physics from Luther College in 2006.
Talk Title:
Improving the Energy Efficiency of IT Data Center Server Farms
One Paragraph Talk Description:
IT data centers are one of the largest and fastest growing power consumers in the world today. With energy costs continuing to rise, data centers faced with making difficult tradeoffs between power and performance. In fact, in a recent EPA report, it was estimated that power costs for U.S. data centers would total $7.4 billion in 2011, with approximately half of that cost being attributed to servers alone. What exacerbates the matter especially is that servers are heavily underutilized on average, wasting expensive power in the process. Despite advances in virtualization technology in recent years, servers today are still utilized less than 20% on average, demonstrating that this problem has not been solved sufficiently.
POW Solutions is commercializing cutting edge power management algorithms developed in the School of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon which address this problem by more efficiently matching demand (incoming workload to the data center) with available supply (the amount of machines available in the data center). In this talk, I will give an overview of how our software solution will perform this optimization, and spend some time discussing how POW uses Linux as an OS platform to develop for, but also as a software development environment. I will finish by briefly discussing the business case to be made for server power savings and optimization in data centers.
Meeting Minutes
To be added.
Meeting Staff
If you would like to volunteer to assist with this meeting, please add your name to one or more of the categories below.
- Host: Terry Golightly Vice Chair Wplug
- Co-Host: Your name here
- Donuts/Bagels: Your name here
- Setup: Your name here, Your name here
- Clean Up: Your name here, Your name here
Carpooling
- Your name/location here