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Information Technology
IEEE proposes energy-efficient ethernet
Energy efficiency over Ethernet? While you may wonder what exactly the point is, since a 100mbp/s switch sitting on your desk doesn't draw all that much power, it actually makes a lot of sense. Many PCs are now coming equipped with gigabit ethernet cards and if you've ever made a trip to an ISP's datacenter you may have seen behemoth 1Gbps/ switches or even more. Those devices draw a considerable amount of power, even when idling. The IEEE is looking for ways to curb that behavior, by introducing some form of seamless throttling:
The idea is to save power in PCs and laptops (most of which ship with GigE cards now) when LAN links are idle, or not utilizing full bandwidth. Researchers estimate that U.S. companies could collectively save $450 million a year in power costs by using such a technology.
Rather than doing a single link-detection and speed-detection upon an interface become active, the proposal would see devices that do real-time checks, allowing a link that is being used very little to throttle down to 10mbps, for instance when just casually surfing, but then increase up to 1Gbps when streaming a video from a media machine in the other room.
It's definitely a challenge, from the speed at which auto-negotiation currently completes to the various different standards hardware has. While the amount of power that Ethernet draws overall is just a drop in the bucket, it's a big enough drop to get others interested.
The idea is to save power in PCs and laptops (most of which ship with GigE cards now) when LAN links are idle, or not utilizing full bandwidth. Researchers estimate that U.S. companies could collectively save $450 million a year in power costs by using such a technology.
Rather than doing a single link-detection and speed-detection upon an interface become active, the proposal would see devices that do real-time checks, allowing a link that is being used very little to throttle down to 10mbps, for instance when just casually surfing, but then increase up to 1Gbps when streaming a video from a media machine in the other room.
It's definitely a challenge, from the speed at which auto-negotiation currently completes to the various different standards hardware has. While the amount of power that Ethernet draws overall is just a drop in the bucket, it's a big enough drop to get others interested.
User Comments (1)
Post a comment| jasonr on April 22, 2008 12:34 PM | It's really a good idea especially for telco and data centers i was at the NOC for bell atlantic at the time and can imagine the power usage they have there with their network, so saving on ethernet or any network technology makes a lot of sense. Even for home use with how broadband is now saving a little energy with all the routers would add up. I'm always trying to save energy anywhere i can after switching all the bulbs in my house to CFL and seeing an immediate drop in cost the following month i've been doing everything i can do bring down all my utility's, double glazing older windows to keep drafts out should save me some money this winter as well as replacing appliances with energy efficient ones.
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