Tag Archive for Green

Earth Day 2021

Earth Day 2021Earth Day is April 22nd. It is the 51st Earth Day. Earth Day is “celebrated around the world when people take time to appreciate humankind’s connection to the Earth and to raise awareness of our environmental challenges,” according to the Earth Day Initiative.

environmental protectionMore than 1 billion people now participate in Earth Day activities each year. Earth day is the largest civic observance in the world. At the first Earth Day in 1970, concerned citizens gathered across the country to learn about environmental degradation. The activism that followed led to the passing of the Clean Air Act and Clean Water Act. These are still landmark legislation in environmental protection.

How to commemorate Earth Day

To commemorate Earth Day 2021, here are some ways to make your tech greener.

  • Reuse Old PC’s – Retired hardware can be used for tasks with lower resource requirements. They can also be re-sold – after wiping your data, of course.
  • Responsibly RecycleResponsibly Recycle – The toxic materials in electronic devices can contain dangerous materials like Cadmium, Mercury Hexavalent chromium and Flame retardants.  Be sure to recycle your electronic waste responsibly to avoid leakage of harmful substances into the environment.
  • User more efficient hardwareSolid State Disk Drives (SSDs) – use less energy than traditional HDDs. An SSD can extend your laptop battery life by 30-45 minutes on average. And they are quitier too.
  • Skip the printer – Use online communications. By skipping the printer you can save a tree and save the money you waste on printer ink. According to PricewaterhouseCoopers, the average person makes 10,000 copies or prints annually at the office plus printing at home.
  • Skip the daily commute – Thanks to COVID, most of use are telecommuting now but – skipping the  commuting to the job can reduce green house gas CO2 that causes climate change. And you can save some cash paying for gas.

Stay safe out there !

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him at LinkedInFacebook and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Under Water Data Center Resurfaces

Under Water Data Center Resurfaces– Updated – 07/07/2024 – Microsoft has discontinued its efforts to build a data center on  the sea floor. “I’m not building subsea data centers anywhere in the world,” Noelle Walsh, the head of Microsoft’s Cloud Operations and Innovation division, told DatacenterDynamics.

Two years ago, Microsoft sank a data center half a mile off Scotland’s Orkney Islands under 117 feet of North Sea water. Earlier this week, they dredged the shipping container-size data center of 864 servers and 27.6 petabytes of storage back to the surface. Now that it has resurfacedMicrosoft (MSFT) researchers are studying how it survived its trip into Davy Jone’s locker and the trip can tell us about land-loving data centers.

Lower failure rate

Microsoft logoTheir first conclusion is that the cylinder with servers packed in like sardines had a lower failure rate than a conventional data center. Only eight out of the 855 servers on board had failed. Ben Cutler, a project manager in Microsoft’s Special Projects research group who leads Project Natick, said in a presser,

Our failure rate in the water is one-eighth of what we see on land.

The MSFT team is speculating that the greater reliability may be connected to the fact that there were no humans on board.  Microsoft’s John Roach explained:

people bump and jostle components,The team hypothesizes that the atmosphere of nitrogen, which is less corrosive than oxygen, and the absence of people to bump and jostle components, are the primary reasons for the difference. If the analysis proves this correct, the team may be able to translate the findings to land data centers.”They believe that land-loving data centers often run into issues like corrosion from oxygen, humidity and temperature fluctuations. and bumps and jostles from people who replace broken components.

Microsoft "Northern Isles"

Alternate power sources for data centers

Project Natick is also about addressing the huge energy demands of data centers as more and more of our data is stored in the cloud. All of Orkney’s electricity comes from alternate power sources, wind and solar power, which was not a problem for the underwater data center “Northern Isles.” Spencer Fowers, Microsoft’s Special Projects research group principal member of technical staff,

We have been able to run really well on what most land-based data centers consider an unreliable grid.

Not only can data centers run on alternative power, but they may not need the huge investment in dedicated buildings, rooms of batteries, and racks of UPS’s. Microsoft’s Fowers speculates;

We are hopeful that we can look at our findings and say maybe we don’t need to have quite as much infrastructure focused on power and reliability.

Underwater data center availability

Microsoft has clammed up about the availability of an underwater data center SKU, but MSFT’s Cutler is confident that it has proved the idea has value;

We think that we’re past the point where this is a science experiment … Now it’s simply a question of what do we want to engineer – would it be a little one, or would it be a large one?

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The drive to autonomous vehicles is just one case that explains MSFT’s idea of micro-self-contained data centers vs. mega-data centers. Even with 5G –  computing power will have to move closer to the user, to the edge of the network. How much latency do you want as your autonomous Tesla, traveling 70 MPH tries to figure out where it is?

Stay safe out there!

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Elephants on the Internet

Elephants on the InternetThe global COVID-19 lockdown is now taking its toll on endangered wildlife like elephants and rhinos around the globe. Global lockdowns have caused a sharp drop in Africa’s wildlife tourism revenue. Wildlife tourism in Africa is a $169 billion industry. It employs 24.6 million people and is often the only employer in areas where wildlife thrives. The tourism business has helped curb poaching in several ways. First, tourists act as a deterrent to poachers. However, with fewer tourists, there are fewer tourist vehicles in parks. They are no longer a deterrent to poachers.

The amount of poaching is on the rise because COVID-19 has reduced funding for law enforcement in wildlife areasAfrica’s wildlife tourism revenue funds help to sustain wildlife reserves across the continent. At many of the reserves more than half of the budget comes from tourism revenues. Matt Brown, with The Nature Conservancy’s Africa program, told ABC News that tourist fees support rangers. Fees such as bed-night, and conservation fees help pay for the rangers‘ salaries. The fees also pay fuel for airplane patrols, and more – hampering security and opening the game reserves to poachers. 

Vulnerable to poaching

Without money to support the rangers — and the highly endangered animals they protect – elephants gorillas and rhinos — are left vulnerable to poachers. The amount of poaching is on the rise because COVID-19 has reduced funding for law enforcement in wildlife areas

highly organized illegal poaching threatens rhinos,

CNBC reports that highly organized illegal poaching threatens to send African wildlife into extinction over the next several decades. Most vulnerable to extinction are the black and white rhinos, lions, and elephants. The black rhino population has plummeted 97.6% since 1960. The lion population is down 43% in the last 21 years, according to the World Wildlife Fund. At least 35,000 African elephants are killed each year. There are only 1,000 mountain gorillas and 2,000 Grevy’s zebras that remain on the continent.

According to reports, six elephants were killed on one June day in Ethiopia’s Mago National Park. That compares to 10 in that nation for all of 2019. Officials suspect that most elephant tusks and finished products are shipped to China and south-east Asian countries. To make matters worst, in 2017 the Trump administration rolled back the ban on hunting elephants. The Trump policy allows elephant remains to be imported into the United States. Conservationists believe that elephants in the wild could be extinct within 10 years due primarily to poaching. 

Using IoT to protect elephants

 OpenCollar, an open-source modular animal-tracking collar system for wildlife monitoringExtinction does not have to be the “new normal.FierceElectronics reported on a collaboration using Internet of Things (IoT) technologies to protect elephants in the wild from extinction by developing a next-generation elephant tracking collar. The collaboration between Phoenix-based electronic components firm Avnet’s developer community Hackster.io, and conservation group Smart Parks which focuses on technology to protect endangered species, are running a design competition called ElephantEdge.

The ElephantEdge challenge asks developers to leverage the Internet of Things (IoT) technologies that can help humans protect elephants from extinction. ElephantEdge will combine software, machine learning (ML), and hardware to build the next generation elephant collars. The next generation collars will have better battery life, longer range, and accuracy that can be worn by elephants in the wild.

Elephant IoT collars

The elephant IoT collars will have sensors for audio pickup, location, and position as well as low-power, wide-area antennas that provide wireless connectivity. The new collar will use hardware and software from different vendors:

The ElephantEdge Challenge requires developers to build machine learning models with Avnet’s Edge Impulse Studio and tracking dashboards with Avnet’s IoTConnect– which will provide useful tracking, health vitals, motion, environmental anomalies, and more. ElephantEdge challenge looks to create machine learning  models like:

  • Poaching Risk Monitoring: Identify an increased risk for poaching by learning when an elephant is moving into a high-risk area and send real-time notifications to park rangers.
  • Human Conflict Monitoring: Prevent conflict between humans and elephants by sensing and alerting when an elephant is heading into an area where farmers live by detecting if any mobile phones or WiFi hotspots are near.
  • Elephant Musth Monitoring: Detect and alert when an elephant bull is in musth by using motion and acoustic sensors to discern this state of erratic, loud, and aggressive behavior.

vocal communications between elephants

  • Elephant Activity Monitoring: Collect data on the general behavior of the elephant, such as when it is drinking, eating, sleeping, etc. by using accelerometer data.
  • Communication Monitoring: Listen for vocal communications between elephants via the onboard microphone. 

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This is an example of when IoT tech can do good for the world – protect animals like elephants, gorillas, rhinos, lions, and polar bears which cannot protect themselves from extinction.

Nobody is going to get rich doing this work – challenge winners will receive an Apple Watch 3 and a collectible t-shirt as prizes – but the world will be a better place.

By the end of 2020, ten next-generation elephant collars will be produced for Smart Parks to deploy in selected African parks, in partnership with the World Wildlife Fund. Final software and hardware will be documented and shared freely under an open-source license. 

Stay safe out there!

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Earth Day 2020

Earth Day 2020Earth Day 2020 is Wednesday, April 22! This year is the 50th anniversary of Earth Day. The theme for Earth Day 2020 is climate action. On the global holiday’s 50th anniversary, the U.S. has one of the highest rates of climate change deniers.

In a survey conducted by the Pew Research Center, the percentage of U.S. adults who say global climate change is a major threat has risen from 44% to 60% since 2009. Statista reports, there’s a large chasm between Democrats and Republicans in their increased awareness.

Climate change awareness grows - Statista

Democrat respondents who say global climate change is a major threat went from 61% in 2009 to 88% in 2020. Republicans who say global climate change is a major threat only increased from 25% to 31% in 11 years. That change isn’t considered statistically significant according to Statista.

Science is useful

Despite increased overall awareness, the politicization of climate change has gotten worse. We are in an era when pretty much all science is under attack by populist leaders. Laws inspired by that first Earth Day are under threat of dismantlement by the current president. Trumpie has criticized climate scientists and downplayed the risks of climate change. Most Republican lawmakers continue to avoid the subject when not parroting the party line that businesses and industries are hobbled by climate-friendly policy and regulations.

Stay safe out there!

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Awesome Elephant Treecycling

Awesome Elephant TreecyclingNow that the holiday season is gone. What are you going to do with your dead Christmas tree? You can use the pine needles for mulch. Most of us end up throwing the tired yule tree to the curb for the city to stick it in the wood chipper or add it to the community “treecycling” pile or repurpose it into a bird sanctuary.

ElephantWhile these are eco-friendly ways to say goodbye to this year’s evergreen. None of these solutions are as awesome as the green strategy employed by zoos around the world. Zoo’s from Berlin to Prague to Tennessee give some animals unsold Christmas trees donated from local tree farms and vendors. The critters don’t get the post-holiday discards from the general public. That’s because trees kept in a house could have chemicals or other contaminants on them, and the elephants prefer to eat fresh, moist trees — not the dried-up, crispy fire hazards that many people have up well into the new year. The plants serve as a good (but prickly) addition to the pachyderms’ usual winter diets.

In Hohenwald, TN the annual Christmas Tree Drive collects the trees for The Elephant Sanctuary. The Elephants are given the trees and the festivities begin..

Those who know this stuff say the trees are nutrient-rich, the tree’s needles are said to help an elephant’s digestion. But beyond all that, it’s pretty cool.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.