Press Release
INTEL DEVELOPER FORUM, San Francisco, Sept. 20, 2007 – Intel Corporation today announced the launch of an open source community project designed to meet the growing demands for increased energy efficiency across the computing spectrum spanning servers in data centers to personal mobile devices.Unveiled at the Intel Developer Forum by Renee James, vice president and general manager of Intel's Software and Solutions Group, the LessWatts.org initiative brings together the community of Linux developers, OSVs and end users to facilitate technology development, deployment and tuning and sharing of information around Linux power management.
For large data centers, server power consumption imposes limits on a center's growth and has significant financial and environmental costs. In addition to the large data center customers, mobile users are also constrained by power consumption limits as battery space is continually squeezed with the overall reduction in size of mobile devices. In both the server and the mobile markets, Linux operating systems continue to grow in relevance and market share.
"We created LessWatts.org to accelerate technology development and simplify information sharing for effective power management across a broad spectrum of devices and industry segments," said James. "A focused Linux initiative that aggregates the disparate efforts into a holistic system will serve as a strong catalyst to get energy efficient solutions into the market faster, thereby benefiting the customers who purchase Intel-based products powered by this initiative."
The LessWatts.org initiative encompasses several key projects including Linux kernel enhancements (such as the 'tickless idle' feature that takes better advantage of power saving hardware technologies), the PowerTOP tool that helps tune Linux applications to be power aware and the Linux Battery Life Toolkit to measure and instrument the impact of Linux code changes on power savings. Additionally, LessWatts.org provides Linux support for hardware power saving features being implemented in current and upcoming Intel platforms.
"Collaborating with Intel in contributing to community projects such as LessWatts.org is a key element of Oracle's commitment to Linux development," said Wim Coekaerts, vice president of Oracle's <need division info>. "The technology developed as part of LessWatts.org will not only benefit Oracle's customers, but Oracle's own data centers as well."
"In response to customer demand for power savings across their entire IT environment, we've implemented significant features in Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 that allow our customers to minimize their carbon footprint," said Paul Cormier, executive vice president of engineering at Red Hat. "These include virtualization that enables server consolidation and highly efficient resource allocation, and support for the power management capabilities provided by the latest Intel processors. Red Hat continues to work closely with Intel to provide customers with ecologically sensitive solutions, and we look forward to actively contributing to the LessWatts.org project."
"Continually providing better power management technologies as part of SuSE Linux Enterprise Server is an important goal for Novell, said Jeff Jaffe, Novell executive vice president and Chief Technology Officer. "We are committed to helping drive the technology forward as part of LessWatts.org and providing value to our customers by incorporating that technology into upcoming SLES releases."
More information is available at www.lesswatts.org.