Showing posts with label ACS Foundation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ACS Foundation. Show all posts

Monday, November 08, 2010

Green IT to Lower Power Bills

Greetings from the Australian National University in Canberra, where William Ehmcke, CEO, Connection Research is talking on Where are the Mega-trends for Software developers?, in the ACS Education Across the Nation series (later in Sydney, Hobart, Adelaide, Bunbury, Darwin):

  • Sustainability and impacts of the climate change debate;
  • The move from CapEx to Opex as a funding model;
  • The uber-Connected world; and
  • Transition into infotainment of ‘everything’
William is arguing that the information and communications industry (ICT) will have a large role in managing energy use and green house gas emissions. One driver for this will be increases in electricity prices, enough to bring them to the attention of householders and CEOs in business. Putting computers on standby will not be enough. Providing video conferencing is not enough: this must be built into business processes.

The ACS sponsored carbon audit by Connection Research "Carbon and Computers in Australia" found 2.7% of Australian carbon emissions were caused by IT. But William cited the "SMART 2020: Enabling the low carbon economy in the information age" (The Climate Group, June 2008) which suggested that ICT could be used to save five times as much energy as it uses.

There are obvious areas for saving energy used by ICT, such as data centres. William mentioned that the common PUE for data centres is 2.5, indicating that less than half of the energy going into a data centre reaches the computers. The energy is lost in power conditioning and cooling. He also mentioned the work on NABERS Data Centre standard.Link
One area for improvement William mentioned was efficiency of processing. Also, in theory, it is possible to shut down parts of systems to save energy. In addition the data is expanding rapidly. I note that Google released mod_pagespeed last week. This is an add-on for the popular Apache web server last week, which is claimed to speed up web sites by 50%.

William envisions a future using private, community and public clouds. Many corporate applications cannot be run on public equipment, but can use the same technology. The issue then is the interface between the public and private clouds.

One point is disagree with is that William argues that unstructured data is growing at more than 60% a year. He argues that web based information is "unstructured" and used Senator Lundy's work on Government 2.0 as an example of initiatives which will increase the amount of unstructured data. However, I believe that this should be treated as semi-structured. Many data structuring techniques can be applied to this to make it more efficient.

William argued that new multiprocessor sophistication will be needed.

I asked which would be the the top trend for Canberra. William nominated two:
  1. Consolidation of government data centres into a government cloud.
  2. Government 2.0, including social networking type features built into some government services.
To these I would add mobile computing. Low cost smart phones and tablets will be flooding the market for Christmas. This will fit well with the cloud and social networking. New government applications could be written on the assumption that the interface device will be a mobile one, with some support added for legacy desktop computers. This will allow for much more efficient applications to be designed.

The cloud model I prefer is a specialised one where an organisation outsources a function supported by software. As an example, ACS and ANU use specialist companies to provide their Learning Management Systems. These companies can then optimise their servers to run just one set of applications for a large number of clients. In a way this is not new, with companies sending their payroll processing out to computer bureaus decades ago.

Monday, July 13, 2009

National ICT Careers Week Video Competition

National ICT Careers Week runs from 27 July to 1 August 2009. The ACS Foundation has a short video competition:

Win an iPod - Make a YouTube video - Be creative - Compete with students around Australia

Show how you envisage information technology helping you have a career that makes a difference.

Just make and submit a two-minute video based on one of the 7 themes of this year's National ICT Careers Week.

Here are the 7 themes - choose one or more:

  1. What does information technology mean to me?
  2. How can information technology solve the world's problems?
  3. How does information technology build connections with people?
  4. How does information technology spark creativity?
  5. How does information technology improve our daily lives?
  6. How can information technology give you the lifestyle you want?
  7. How can information technology give you a global career?

There's an iPod Touch prize for the most popular idea in each theme.

Enter the competition

To enter, make your video and upload onto ACS Foundation's YouTube Channel: www.youtube.com/acsfoundation.

Videos will be judged by the number of times it has been viewed. So encourage all your friends and family to view it.

Entries close on 1 October 2009 and winners will be announced on 15th October 2009 on the ACS Foundation website, by phone, and email.

Take a look at the videos already uploaded.

The Australian Computer Society Foundation - a non-profit organisation helping young people with scholarships to study information technology at university - is running this competition.

Want more information

Contact John Ridge by calling (02) 8296 4445, or email John at john.ridge@acsfoundation.com.au

Information technology gives great jobs earning great money with a great lifestyle

Information technology careers are one of the most rapidly growing career pathways available. Information technology jobs give you:

  • a chance to combine any or all of your interests into one job
  • a career that will put you in demand across a dynamic industry where re- training is easy
  • a good chance for fast promotion
  • good choices in job flexibility: work at home, in the office, part-time, casual, full time...
  • and, of course, excellent salaries!

Great opportunities coming up

People with Information technology skills and qualifications will be needed in our businesses, in our governments, in our communities, and in our daily lives.

Information technology will continue to be in demand in the banking, healthcare, telecommunications, education, entertainment, transport, manufacturing, tourism, primary industry, security, environmental management, and many other areas vital to our economy and communities.

That means that now is the time to be studying information technology at and after school.

National ICT Career Week

National ICT Career Week is running in the week of 27th July - 1st August 2009. It's an Australia-wide show to encourage young people to think about studying and working in computing and communications.

For more information: www.ictcareersweek.info

About The ACS Foundation

The ACS Foundation was established in August 2001 to encourage both private and public sponsorship of students studying IT higher education and research. Since its establishment, the ACS Foundation has raised more than $20 million and awarded more than 1,400 scholarships.

ACS Foundation
www.acsfoundation.com.au
(02) 9299 3666
Level 3,160 Clarence St, Sydney, NSW