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Display results by tag: data centre

Kevin Turner

Making Carbon Neutrality Everyone’s Responsibility at Microsoft

Kevin Turner, Chief Operating Officer, Microsoft - 21 May 2012

Microsoft has a long tradition of tackling tough challenges at a global scale. We have always focused on how our technology can enrich people’s lives, build businesses, and inspire and change the world.

Rob Bernard

Earth Day 2012: A progress report

Rob Bernard, Chief Environmental Strategist - 18 April 2012

Three years ago, Microsoft adopted a broad environmental strategy. This strategy included commitments to reduce the impact of our operations and products, and to accelerate the use of information technology in addressing serious environmental issues. Our CEO sent out a company-wide email detailing our strategy, and highlighted some of the steps the company would take to be more environmentally responsible.

Ray Pinto

Reducing emissions of data centre activity

Ray Pinto, Senior Government Affairs Manager - 19 March 2012 | 2 comments

Microsoft Ireland Research has been working on electricity grid research that allows the exact energy consumption and emissions to be measured for any piece of computation performed in a data centre. This allows past or predicted emissions to be calculated for any computation performed in the cloud and opens the doorway to measuring and reducing the emissions produced by data centres around the world.

VIDEO: Take a peek into our cloud data centres

VIDEO: Take a peek into our cloud data centres

Fabien Petitcolas, Director for Innovation, Europe - 07 September 2011

The internet is developing at a tremendous pace as more businesses and people worldwide gain access to a vast range of online services. Increasingly, those services are built using cloud computing technologies which provide companies with an opportunity to save money on ICT infrastructure, and software developers with an advanced interoperable platform to create, test and deploy new services faster.

Ray Pinto

Microsoft’s quest for greater efficiency in the cloud

Ray Pinto, Senior Government Affairs Manager - 09 September 2011

I underlined in several of my previous posts that cloud computing brings great benefits such as scalability and increased energy efficiency, but what about the next phase? As data centers grow in capacity and the rate of adoption increases, we need also to look to the future.

Frank McCosker

New innovations in IT support environmental sustainability in Africa

Frank McCosker, MD, Multilateral & Bilateral Organisations - 06 April 2011

Last week, I was in Nairobi, Kenya for the United Nations Chief Executive Briefing, where Ban Ki-moon, the UN Secretary General, launched the UN’s new energy neutral Nairobi office building. The building is the first of its kind for the UN in Africa and is a global showcase of sustainable design and technology.

Mary-Anne King

IT sector will become a key player in a low-carbon society

Mary-Anne King, Head of Environmental Sustainability, Microsoft UK - 07 March 2011

I wanted to share with you an interview in The Guardian with Rob Bernard, Microsoft’s Chief Environmental Strategist.

Smart climate change solutions through ICT and cloud computing

Smart climate change solutions through ICT and cloud computing

Lisa Boch-Andersen, Senior Director for Communications Europe - 19 October 2010

It’s a clear message my colleagues gave me at a recent event: the ICT industry and cloud computing are key components in helping to reduce the carbon footprint in Europe.  But of course ICT people would say that, I hear you cry!

Mark Lange

We’re all in cloud computing

Mark Lange, Director EU Institutional Relations - 05 March 2010

Our favorite Geek in Disguise, Steve Clayton from the UK, provides on his blog a short and useful summary of Steve Ballmer’s speech yesterday in which the Microsoft CEO described how “we’re all in” cloud computing.

Ray Pinto

New York Times article on the Dublin Data Centre!

Ray Pinto, Senior Government Affairs Manager - 15 February 2010

As you may have read before on this site, we opened one of the largest data centres in Europe just last year in Dublin. Large-scale facilities such as this can play a big role in the development of cloud computing, providing companies with better and cheaper computing facilities. Great news to resource-strapped companies in particular.

Cloud Computing: Software plus Services explained

Cloud Computing: Software plus Services explained

Steve Clayton, Microsoft Storyteller - 20 January 2010 | 3 comments

Ray Ozzie introduced the term Software plus Services about 3 years ago and since then it’s where I have focused all of my time at Microsoft.

Ray Pinto

An insider’s take on the Dublin data centre: an environmental benchmark

Ray Pinto, Senior Government Affairs Manager - 04 December 2009

We were very proud to announce the grand opening of our Dublin data centre last month. This state of the art facility helps to improve cloud computing capacity and network infrastructure throughout Europe to meet the demand generated from Microsoft’s online, live and cloud services (like Bing, Windows Live and the Azure Services Platform).

Keep it cool: the greening of Microsoft’s data centers

Keep it cool: the greening of Microsoft’s data centers

Cormac Sheridan - 01 December 2009

Microsoft’s first European “mega data centre”, which opened recently on the western outskirts of Dublin, uses 50 per cent less energy than a traditional data centre built some three years ago.

Ray Pinto

Meeting sustainability requirements in Microsoft Data Centers in Europe

Ray Pinto, Senior Government Affairs Manager - 19 October 2009

We at Microsoft are delighted to see the opening of the first "mega data center" here in Europe. The Dublin Data Center is part of Microsoft’s long-term commitment in the region, and is a major step in realising Microsoft’s Software plus Services strategy.

Greening the Dublin data center

Greening the Dublin data center

01 September 2009

The internet is developing at a tremendous pace as more businesses and peopleworldwide gain access to an ever greater range of online services including online office functionality, video and music downloads and more. 

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