Features
Getting Easier to Be Green
1/1/0001 By:
by Pam Derringer
Faced with steep energy costs and
shrinking school budgets, cashstrapped
IT directors are discovering
that going green is not just good for
the environment; it’s good for the wallet.
With IT consuming up to 25 percent
of a district’s power and today’s energy
bills often topping costs in every category
except staffing, they are realizing
that green initiatives like power management,
virtualizing of servers and
desktops, and even cloud computing
make good economic sense. These
ideas stretch hardware dollars as well
as lighten the management workloads
of overstretched staffs.

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| A Santa Ana College interns built this Green Lab, which saves money, cuts emissions, and
promotes green computing among the lab’s corporate sponsors.
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Power-reduction efforts, in turn,
help the environment by lowering
greenhouse gases. Userful Corp. estimates
that every year, each of its
Multiplier desktop virtualization systems
keeps 200,000 tons of carbon
dioxide that would otherwise be generated
by 10 PCs out of the atmosphere.
And the cost of the company’s simple
plug-and-play hardware setups is a
fraction of the purchase price of a
desktop computer.
Some school districts may not know
the amount of greenhouse gas they emit
into the atmosphere. But the free calculator
in the green computing section of
the Consortium for School Networking’s
Web site can help them figure that out.
Many districts are stretching dollars and
reducing emissions with power-shutdown
software, like Faronics Power Save
and Verdiem, that monitors usage and
shuts computers down remotely, says
Rick Kaestner, coauthor of CoSN’s recent
report on IT budget survival strategies
and director of the consortium’s green
initiative. In addition, he says, school districts
large enough to have their own
data centers are beginning to virtualize
many of their servers, saving money and
energy, and reducing emissions in the
process. “Schools get twice the bang for
the buck” saving on hardware and annual
cooling expenses (which can approach
the costs of server acquisition), conserving
space, and easing management
workloads for reduced staffs.
Recently, however, interest
in desktop virtualization
has grown. Traditional
desktop virtualization systems,
such as Citrix
Systems’, haven’t gained a
foothold in education,
because they aren’t customized
for schools and are
complex and costly, according
to Chris Wolf, an analyst with the
Burton Group. But simpler, newer
thin client systems, like those of
nComputing (a competitor of Userful),
are thriving, he says, because they are
cost-effective, use less energy, and don’t
burden the network.
In March, Microsoft joined the desktop
virtualization movement with the
debut of its Multipoint Server 2010. As
does nComputing, the Multipoint Server
connects many users to one PC, saving
up to 40 percent on hardware and simplifying
licensing for new users. In fact,
desktop virtualization generally, and
nComputing in particular, appears to be
booming and was also cited by Kaestner
and nearly every IT manager interviewed.
nComputing has 2.5 million users and
is growing rapidly because of its low cost
and power consumption and fast setup,
which can be done in hours instead of
days, says Jim McHugh, nComputing’s
vice president of marketing, adding that
President Obama used it to set up offices
during his campaign. This past spring,
computer-science interns at Santa Ana
(Calif.) College created a green lab from
scratch, installing nComputing on four
PCs in a setup that is expandable to 40
stations, says Cherylee Kushida, technology
grant coordinator. The nComputing
installations were “a snap,” according to
Nick Quach, Santa Ana’s IT director for
academic services, and are expected to
save the school 81 percent on energy and
69 percent on hardware costs.
Other cost-saving tools include Webbased
portals like Classlink. Hudson Falls
(N.Y.) Central School District uses
ClassLink to provide its 2,400 students
with “anywhere” access to personalized
content. ClassLink has saved the district
$40,000 by monitoring application use
down to the classroom level, enabling
Hudson Falls to discontinue, reduce, or
reallocate software that is underutilized,
says Greg Partch, director of education
technology.
At the same time that it implemented
ClassLink, Hudson Valley began installing
1,400 Hewlett-Packard thin client
machines, which have fewer emissions
because the processing power is centralized
in the server. The thin clients have
cut annual power costs by 88 percent, a
savings of $48,000, and lowered air-conditioning
use and were cheaper to buy
than full desktops, Partch says. But the
best benefit of the HP thin clients, he
says, is centralized management; all
the upgrades and patches can be
tested on one server,
replicated to the other
11, and then pushed out
to 1,800 desktops automatically
in an hour.
“There’s no way we could
manage 1,800 desktops
without this,” Partch says.
By virtualizing desktops, servers,
and storage networks, Judson
(Texas) ISD, near San Antonio, a
CoSN green certified district, has saved
millions of dollars and improved service.
Judson uses nComputing in elementary
classrooms, cutting deployment costs in
half, and runs Citrix XenApp thin clients
in the higher grades, says Steve Young,
chief technology officer. Though the latter
doesn’t save energy, he explains, it
extends the life of older, CRT machines.
The district is also saving money by
automating computer shutdowns, which
it accomplished for $150,000 by writing
its own script, he says, instead of paying
$5 a computer for a software application.
Judson will also look at Schoology, a free
open-source course-management system,
and Microsoft’s new online school
suite, which has email and other programs.
“Certainly, if someone wants to
manage 20,000 email accounts, that’s
very attractive to us,” Young says.
White Oak (Texas) ISD is already in
the cloud. After peaking at 17 servers,
the district got rid of nearly all of them
three years ago, renting space across
the globe for all basic school functions,
including student information services
(Skyward), testing, blogging (Edublog),
and grading, using open source wherever
possible, says chief of technology
Michael Gras. DHCP and DNS are the
only IT servers remaining; White Oak’s
only other school servers are Plato
Learning for remedial education and a
few classroom servers maintained by
the teachers. Moving to
the cloud has not only
cut down on time and
reduced power consumption
but saved a
lot of money,
shaving tens of
thousands of dollars
from IT expenses,
Gras says. “We have no
central anything,” he
explains. “We open up to the world.”