Microsoft is forging forward internally with its Green Datacenter Initiative, with teams across the company providing assistance, advice and suggestions on how Microsoft can tutorial consumers in reducing the environmental influence of Microsoft;s technologies.Microsoft Licensed Architect Lewis Curtis — who said he has been appointed Microsoft;s first “environmental evangelist” — provided an update on the provider;s green activities via a blog post on September 8. (That blog post has since been pulled with no explanation as to why.)According to a copy of Curtis; pulled post:“While this was forming,
Microsoft Office 2010 Sale, we had aprox 14 different groups provide support and advice for the Green Datacenter Initiative (which is amazing as we didn;t really have an executive sponsor). With so many passionate volunteers,
Windows 7 Professional X86, it has the sense of a populist movement working for a better world and a better Microsoft. With time, more managers have become supportive and starting to see value from this movement from it;s own employees.”(In spite of the lack of an executive champion, Microsoft does seem to have named Michael Manos to head up the business;s internal Green Datacenter efforts,
Buy Microsoft Office 2010, according to Curtis; post. Manos is the Senior Director of Datacenter Services at Microsoft and has quite a bit to do with helping to manage Microsoft;s rapidly expanding network of datacenters across the world.)Curtis said Microsoft needs to help Windows 2008 consumers implement green best practices “with virtualization, branch office design,
Windows 7 Ultimate X64, Core systems and advanced power mgmt to reduce power consumption and environmental influence. This holds true for .net 3.5 power aware appliations, SQL Srvr,
Cheap Windows 7 Starter, Expressions, Dyanamics and Live Services.”It sounds like Curtis; first assignment will be to “promote change in the firm and with our customers with GDI,” Microsoft;s graphics device interface that is part of Windows.