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Home >> Departmental and End User Computing >> Small-Area Networking (SAN)

Cisco adds power management to switches

Cisco adds power management to switches

By:  Greg Meckbach  On: 26 Jan 2009 For: Network World Canada Creator

EnergyWise will let IT managers turn IP phones and wireless access points off when they are not in use. Find out how the software can be used to manage climate control, lighting and ventilation

Cisco Systems Inc. has announced software for its switches designed to turn off Internet Protocol phones and wireless access points after normal working hours. Dubbed EnergyWise, the software will eventually be used in building control systems to automatically turn off lights, heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC) systems.

“I do think (the cost saving) could be significant,” said Zeus Kerravala, senior vice-president for global enterprise research at the Boston-based Yankee Group. “For Cisco, it’s a continued expansion of the role of the network. I don’t know if another vendor could make this initiative work.”

The first phase of EnergyWise, available now, is a free software patch for the Catalyst 2960, 3560 and 3750 switches, said William Choe, director of the Ethernet switching group at San Jose, Calif.-based Cisco. The focus, he said, is on controlling Power over Ethernet devices, including IP phones and access points, whether or not they are made by Cisco. Eventually, Cisco plans to make it available in its Integrated Services Routers.

Choe said a bank with 100 branches might use 5,000 IP phones and have one access point for every 10 employees. By turning these off after normal working hours, the bank could save US$37,000 per year. This is a hypothetical example, and was not proven by a Cisco beta tester.

The second phase of EnergyWise, scheduled to roll out this summer, will let companies control power to personal computers and printers. This will involve a partnership with Seattle-based Verdiem Corp., which makes Surveyor, a product that puts PCs on lower power settings when they are not being used.

Quoting the market research firm Dell’Oro Group, Choe said businesses worldwide are using about 80 million IP phones and 8.5 million wireless access points.

“If you can turn these off four hours a day you can see what this would mean in carbon (emission) reductions to our planet,” he said.

The third phase of EnergyWise, scheduled for availability next year, will control building systems including HVAC, elevators, lights, employee badge access systems, fire alarms and physical security.

Though these systems are often automated, they operate on networks using protocols such as Modbus, said Dave Johnson, senior vice-president for home and business networks at American Power Conversion Corp., a subsidiary of Schneider Electric.


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Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach is editor of Network World Canada and has worked for ComputerWorld Canada, Communications & Networking and Computing Canada.
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