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Showing posts from March, 2011

Benchmarking becoming obsolete?

Today I was asked to give my opinion on the proposition “when outsourcing is benchmarking required to prevent a failure” by an editor of an IT magazine. My first thought was: of course it is, as including a benchmark clause in a contract was standard practice when I drafted a contract. But then I thought again and come to a less back-and-white conclusion. Benchmarking before or during the contract period is common good and big business for companies like Gartner, Alsbridge and Compass, but given the increased complexity and tailoring of the solutions provided I wonder whether their usage is not restricted to a limited set of services. Services which soon get so common that many just buy them out of the cloud. Let me explain. Many organizations outsourcing for the first time did not know what to expect from a supplier and often also have no clue about the cost of a workspace or server. They just knew the total IT budget and had a target to reduce it by 5% before next year. The bench

Run your datacenter on paprika’s

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The Netherlands has traditionally a leading position in agricultural (Tulip anyone?), but due to the climate many crops are grown in greenhouses that have to be heated during winter. The engines used run on gas and the resulting heat and carbon dioxide are used to create the optimum growing conditions. These ‘micro combined heat and power engines (Micro-CHP) produce also electricity however, and much more than needed to provide artificial lighting during the night hours. One options to feed the access power back to the grid or to feed it directly to nearby houses and company buildings. One such initiative includes using the power of 35 engines used to heat 220 hectares of greenhouses to power a new datacenter. The access heat produced by the datacenter is in turn fed back to the greenhouses. This initiative is an example of the increased emphasis on sustainability within many industries and at the role of technology as an enabler (e.g. smart grid). Reducing the environmental footprin