With all the talk about the data inconsistencies around climate change theory, one issue that I’d hate to see lost in the shuffle is the actual environment. That is, while I personally have been skeptical for some time about the alarmist tone many scientists took regarding global warming, it would be a shame if there was such a backlash that people forget about the much more crucial, larger issue at stake. That is, we need to look at all the ways –on macro- and micro-scales–that we can reduce the overall pollution we generate through our daily habits.
One of the persistent myths about the Internet is that it is clean and green. We overestimate the value of going “paperless” while lowballing the effect on the environment of data centers. One need only look at an online pub like Data Center Knowledge to see that one of the most talked about issues in data centers today is how to reduce rack space, cooling and other energy costs associated with storage. (Another great resource is Greg Schulz’s StorageI/O blog.) This is particularly true of the data being generated through our new Web 2.0 sharing habits. Jon Toigo can laugh about the exploding digital universe all he likes, but it’s still the case that data growth is going like gangbusters in this socially networked era. Recession or no recession, there is a growing demand for ways to make storage more efficient.
Large players in this space are all too aware of the environmental and financial costs of such rapid data growth. Every time you share a photo or video, you’re contributing to it. And who among us doesn’t do this nowadays? In response. companies are experimenting with all kinds of techniques, including new building designs making use of outside air, reducing overall rack space usage with data reduction such as is offered by this blog’s parent Ocarina, cloud adoption, and so on and so forth. Companies like Google, Yahoo and Facebook are also creating next generation storage architectures that are more efficient for handling the realities of today’s internet. In short, let’s be sure, as we discuss the fallout from the latest global warming debate that we don’t start acting too lax about the effect of our actions on the planet.
