GreenM3 partners with University of Missouri, 400 MW Data Center Site with Mike Manos on advisor’s list

This is the beginning of a change in what I write about on this blog.  I’ll keep commenting on various things in the data center industry that help you go green.  But, it was becoming clear that there was more I could do.

On March 1, 2010 the University of Missouri signed a Statement of Support for GreenM3, Enginuity, and ARG Investments. The document is here Download University of Missouri Statement of Support.

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The following are excerpts of this 6 page document that describe the partnership and the role of GreenM3.

In the early discussions with the University of Missouri, there was a clear role for a NPO, Not For Profit Organization, and one of suggestions that stuck is why don’t turn GreenM3 into a NPO. So, thanks to some volunteers, we are in the process of getting 501(c ) (3) status for GreenM3.

WHEREAS, the Greentech Research Foundation, Inc (GreenM3), Non-Profit Organization (NPO) is established as an independent and objective source that will contribute to the step change advancement of data center and ancillary services operations that strives to provide a platform for stable, secure, efficient and sustainable state-of-the-art operations that can be replicated world-wide, accomplished through public/private investment and;

The partnerships started based on the idea data center innovation requires public private partnerships.

WHEREAS, the disruptive and transformative nature of computer driven communications and commerce is little understood and creates an environment of extreme risk and opportunity, the harnessing, of which, can only be accomplished through applied research from a consortium of successful market operators and research specialists; there is a common need shared within the industry for a clearing-house or central hub of research needed to advance data center operation

To be innovative we needed a different model of operation where ideas could easily develop and can be evaluated.  The Open Source Software model made sense given the data center focus.

Open source describes practices in production and development that promote access to the end product's source materials—typically, their source code.[1] Some consider open source a philosophy, others consider it a pragmatic methodology. Before the term open source became widely adopted, developers and producers used a variety of phrases to describe the concept; open source gained hold with the rise of a public, worldwide, computer-network system called the Internet, and the attendant need for massive retooling of the computing source code. Opening the source code enabled a self-enhancing diversity of production models, communication paths, and interactive communities. [2] Subsequently, a new, three-word phrase "open source software" was born to describe the environment that the new copyright, licensing, domain, and consumer issues created.

We accept the fact that there are multiple agendas and embrace the idea to drive different designs vs a centralized approach.

The open source model includes the concept of concurrent yet different agendas and differing approaches in production, in contrast with more centralized models of development such as those typically used in commercial software companies. [3] A main principle and practice of open sourcesoftware development is peer production by bartering and collaboration, with the end-product (and source-material) available at no cost to the public.

As a demonstration, ARG Investments is a private company ready to implement ideas at the Ewing Industry Park from the GreenM3 team.  Individuals who want to accelerate changes in data center industry are the ideal members, and one of the first industry advisors for GreenM3’s new role is Mike Manos.  Mike and I have had numerous conversations and we can now work together to implement some disruptive data center ideas.  There are about another 5 – 10 individuals lined up going through the various approvals to be an advisor to the NPO, and I’ll blog about each as they can formalize their commitment.

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Facilitating Data Center Advancement: With not-for-profit partner, GreenM3, a nonprofit organization, the team is dedicated to developing and sharing best practices for total sustainability, to reduce the carbon impact and water use in power generation, building, data center operations, and education. Collaboration with members of the Industry Advisory Council, led by Michael J. Manos of Nokia, will be facilitated by GreenM3 and Enginuity Worldwide LLC, an innovation-based business.

 

One of the main purposes of the GreenM3 blog is to share ideas for a greener data center. With University of Missouri Resources and a data center

Facilitating Data Center Advancement:

With not-for-profit partner, GreenM3, a nonprofit organization, the team is dedicated to developing and sharing best practices for total sustainability, to reduce the carbon impact and water use in power generation, building, data center operations, and education. Collaboration with members of the Industry Advisory Council, led by Michael J. Manos of Nokia, will be facilitated by GreenM3 and Enginuity Worldwide LLC, an innovation-based business.

To test the ideas there is the partnership with Ewing Industrial Park and ARG Investments.

WHEREAS, ARG Investments LLC, a Missouri based company, (ARG) desires to build a technology campus and innovation-led development at Ewing Business Park, Columbia, Missouri as well as foster improvement in the global data center and cloud-computing space through its not-for-profit partner Greentech Research Foundation, Inc (GreenM3), including the following actions and initiatives:

Implementing the Best and Most Compelling Innovation: Data Centers can be at the nexus of cloud computing, mobile devices, and renewable energy with the right team of people. Based on business model frameworks, and by using an operating business park as the vessel for technology implementation, the technology improvements are more likely to uncover step-change advances and facilitate industry adoption.

And what do we get out of University of Missouri?  Executive support from the University.

I. SINGLE POINT OF CONTACT AND CORPORATE OFFICE

University of Missouri will make available the Vice Provost of Economic Development, or his designee, as single point of contact for ARG & GreenM3 through its Office of Economic Development and can provide meeting space for ARG & GreenM3 with on-campus contacts.

II. UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI TEAM

University of Missouri can establish a high-level administrative response team to assure responsiveness and delivery of requested services and programs.

The team can consist of the appropriate administrators or their designees from the list below:

Chancellor

Provost

Vice Provost for Economic Development

Vice Chancellor for Research

Vice Chancellor for Administrative Services

Vice Provost for Undergraduate Studies

Vice Provost and Director of Cooperative Extension

Dean from various MU Colleges and Schools

Key Center Directors

Other Administrative or Technical Staff as needed

This team can meet periodically with ARG & GreenM3 administrators to further the success of the relationship and provide a continuous communication network.

Educational resources and centers of innovation are of course included.

This is the beginning of an exciting changes for GreenM3, and part of what this blog will do is share a new way to partner with a data center developer (ARG Investments) and University (Mizzou) to green the data center.

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Mobile changing the consumption of Information, a 3 year Roadmap for Mobile Newspaper Success

It is an accepted fact that the consumption of news on Mobile Phones is growing.  Anyone who thinks print is growing hasn’t seen the number of idled pulp and paper mill capacity that ironically can be repurposed by data centers to host internet news.

ZDNET writes a perspective on the subject of Mobile and News.

News on mobile phones is growing; Newspapers get second chance

Posted by Sam Diaz @ 3:30 am

Categories: General, Mobile

Tags: Phone, Mobile, Cell Phone, Cellular Phones, Consumer Electronics...

The Associated Press took an interesting approach to a report released today by the Pew Research Center about news consumption in an online world. That headline highlighted that 26 percent of adult Americans now get their news from their mobile phones, an interesting statistic. It also noted that 43 percent of “younger’ cell phone owners - that under age 50 - are also reading news stories on their phones, compared to 15 percent of cell phone owners who fall in the “over-50″ category.

I like the ZDNet Between the lines because they refer to other news like CNET.

There was a lot more to that report and CNET breaks it down nicely. For example, 59 percent of the audience get their news from both online and offline sources and 57 percent said they have between two and five favorite Web sites to visit for their news. It also found that 37 percent are engaging in the news, either by commenting or pushing headlines to their friends and associates via social sites like Facebook and Twitter.

and, they point to a blog entry by Reynolds Journalism Institute at University of Missouri.

But I found the statistic about mobile especially interesting because, just a few weeks ago. a fellow of the Reynolds Journalism Institute and an associate professor at the Missouri School of Journalism, published a blog post that sounded the alarm about the news industry’s need for a mobile strategy for content delivery.

I tell some friends that I am staring to work with Mizzou and they have one of the top journalism schools. One person having a journalism degree, said “never heard of them who is famous from their school.”  Knowing I was talking to someone who didn’t know journalism, I had fun and pointed out Brad Pitt went to Mizzou for Journalism.  That got her attention.

pittBRAD PITT
Brad Pitt was born on December 18, 1963 in Shawnee, Oklahoma. He attended Kickapoo High School in Springfield, Missouri and majored in journalism at the University of Missouri. He was a member of Sigma Chi and the Homecoming Steering Committee and did some acting in Greek talent events. Just two credits shy of graduating, Pitt took off for Los Angeles to start his acting career.

But, there are well respected journalist too.

lehrerJIM LEHRER
Jim Lehrer was born in Wichita, Kansas, in 1934. He is a graduate of Victoria College in Texas and a 1956 graduate of the University of Missouri Journalism School.

 

 

And, Mizzou has a blog just on Mobile Journalism, and wrote an entry on Feb 6, 2010 for a 3 year timeframe on how Newspapers need to start now on their mobile strategy.

The road to 2013: A timeline for newspapers

Posted on February 6, 2010 by Clyde Bentley

When I first saw Gartner Research’s list of predictions for IT organizations and the people they serve, I was amused.  Guessing games are always fun. As I read on, I became concerned.  Then a bit afraid.

But now I’m just fired up for a challenge.

Gartner is no slouch at forecasting trends in technology and business using sophisticated research tools to make more-than-educated guesses.  This year’s predictions ranged from India taking the lead in cloud aggregation to Internet marketing coming under government regulation.

the timeframe is as follows.

Bentley’s Timeline for Mobile Newspaper Success

February 2010 Gartner predicts mobile will replace PC in Web access by 2013
March 2010 Research  the cell provider/handset type in newspaper’s market area
April 2010 Key editors have smartphones
May 2010 Designate mobile editors
June 2010 Mobile edition (MWeb) online content
July 2010 Text-message alert systems activated; reader mobile phone numbers collected
August-September 2010 Train news and ad staff on mobile potential
October 2010 Have apps for iPhone, Android, Blackberry and Symbian
November-December 2010 Offer mobile coupons via text and mobile Web
January 2011 Ready to receive mobile voice, text and image submissions from the public
February 2011 Reporters have phones that can capture image, video and sound and deliver it to the home office
March-April 2011 Integrate mobile content and commerce: Bar code advertising, ticket sales
May-June 2011 Optimize MWeb/app editions that take advantage of GMS, return text, text-to-voice delivery
July-August 2011 Provide niche M-news: Smoke-break wraps, during-game scores, pre-commute weather
September-October 2011 Offer location-based feature stories/videos/ads
November 2011 Link readers into mobile social networks with “find friends nearby” ability
December 2011 Offer location-based feature stories/videos/ads
January 2012 Newspapers take the lead as top mobile news provider
February-March 2012 Provide just-in-time comics, mobile games
April-May 2012 Provide mobile guide/help/find services
June-July 2012 Offer full-length books and longform features for mobile reading
August-September 2012 Provide augmented reality stories and ads
October -November 2012 Offer Web-enabled handsets as subscription premiums
December 2012 Integrate mobile and online newsroom operations
January 2013  More people access the Web by mobile than by PC

But, not one month later, Pew Research gives more research information referring to the growth of mobile devices used to read the news.

3 years may be too long of a timeframe for the newspaper agencies.  The likes of MSNBC, Google News, and the following are all planning the list already.  Here are the top 6 Google search listings for “news”

  1. Breaking News, Weather, Business, Health, Entertainment, Sports ...
    - 3 visits - 11/30/09

    Mar 1, 2010 ... Msnbc.com is a leader in breaking news, video and original journalism. Stay current with daily news updates in health, entertainment, ...
    www.msnbc.msn.com/ - 24 minutes ago - Cached - Similar -

  2. CNN.com - Breaking News, U.S., World, Weather, Entertainment ...

    CNN.com delivers the latest breaking news and information on the latest top stories, weather, business, entertainment, politics, and more.

    World - Money - Sports - Video

    www.cnn.com/ - 45 minutes ago - Cached - Similar -

  3. Breaking News | Latest News | Current News - FOXNews.com

    Breaking News, Latest News and Current News from FOXNews.com. Breaking news and video. Latest Current News: US, World, Entertainment, Health, Business, ...

    The O'Reilly Factor - World - Video - Politics

    www.foxnews.com/ - Cached - Similar -

  4. Google News

    Aggregated headlines and a search engine of many of the world's news sources.
    news.google.com/ - Cached - Similar -

  5. The top news headlines on current events from Yahoo! News - Yahoo ...

    Feb 28, 2010 ... Use Yahoo! News to find breaking news, current events, the latest headlines,news photos, analysis & opinion on top stories, world, ...
    news.yahoo.com/ - Cached - Similar -

  6. Technology News - CNET News

    Mar 1, 2010 ... Tech news and business reports by CNET News. Focused on information technology, core topics include computers, hardware, software, ...
    news.cnet.com/ - 24 minutes ago - Cached - Similar -

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Obama says we need new generation safe, clean nuclear power plants

cnet news has a post on President Obama’s speech.  An excerpt they have from the speech on energy is.

Here are some excerpts from the president's speech:

We should put more Americans to work building clean energy facilities, and give rebates to Americans who make their homes more energy efficient, which supports clean energy jobs...(Last year's investment) could lead to the world's cheapest solar cells or treatment that kills cancer cells but leaves healthy ones untouched. And no area is more ripe for such innovation than energy. You can see the results of last year's investment in clean energy--in the North Carolina company that will create 1,200 jobs nationwide helping to make advanced batteries; or in the California business that will put 1,000 people to work making solar panels...

But to create more of these clean energy jobs, we need more production, more efficiency, more incentives. That means building a new generation of safe, clean nuclear power plants in this country. It means making tough decisions about opening new offshore areas for oil and gas development. It means continued investment in advanced biofuels and clean coal technologies. And yes, it means passing a comprehensive energy and climate bill with incentives that will finally make clean energy the profitable kind of energy in America.

Going to white house gov web site is the same with inserts for (applause).

Next, we need to encourage American innovation.  Last year, we made the largest investment in basic research funding in history -– (applause) -- an investment that could lead to the world's cheapest solar cells or treatment that kills cancer cells but leaves healthy ones untouched.  And no area is more ripe for such innovation than energy.  You can see the results of last year's investments in clean energy -– in the North Carolina company that will create 1,200 jobs nationwide helping to make advanced batteries; or in the California business that will put a thousand people to work making solar panels.

But to create more of these clean energy jobs, we need more production, more efficiency, more incentives.  And that means building a new generation of safe, clean nuclear power plants in this country.  (Applause.)  It means making tough decisions about opening new offshore areas for oil and gas development.  (Applause.)  It means continued investment in advanced biofuels and clean coal technologies.  (Applause.)  And, yes, it means passing a comprehensive energy and climate bill with incentives that will finally make clean energy the profitable kind of energy in America.  (Applause.)

On my next trip to Mizzou, I want to see if I can visit the faculty at University of MIssouri Research Reactor Center that I blogged about in Oct 2009.

Nuclear Reactor Research at University of Missouri

I was just in Columbia, Missouri, and the folks I was with took me on campus and we drove by the University of Missouri Nuclear Reactor, a 10 mW facility.

Endowing The Future

The internationally recognized University of Missouri Research Reactor (MURR), a
10-megawatt facility, is the most powerful among the dozens of research reactors located on our nation’s university campuses.

Even worldwide, few facilities can compare.

Those at MURR treat it like the unique national resource that it is, employing the facility as a research source – providing products and services that will save or extend people’s lives.

The superior level of the science at MURR helps put the products and services it offers a step ahead, further fueling the depth of its research.

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Safer Natural Gas storage at a data center site

Natural Gas or methane gas from a landfill is a possibility to provide on site power generation for data centers via fuel cells, but the storage tanks to supply days worth of energy at a site can be a risk.  As natural gas is looked for a fuel for cars, safer storage is a priority.

Going through the National Renewable Energy Lab site I found a presentation on the current efforts on Hydrogen storage.

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One easy starting point for is University of Missouri, so I drilled into what Professor Peter Pfeifer from the University is doing.  And, found this article.


Fuel of the Next Generation of Clean Vehicles Is in Missouri's Soil

MU researchers developing more practical natural gas storage tanks using corncob waste, landfills

April 9, 2009

Story Contact:  Kelsey Jackson, (573) 882-8353, JacksonKN@missouri.edu

COLUMBIA, Mo. -Natural-gas-fueled cars would be more eco-friendly and cost efficient than current petroleum-fueled cars. However, natural-gas-fueled vehicles face a few road blocks before they can cruise on every U.S. highway. The Alliance for Collaborative Research in Alternative Fuel Technology (ALL-CRAFT), a partnership among the University of Missouri, the Midwest Research Institute (MRI) and nine other institutes, is working to make natural-gas-fueled cars a reality by using existing Missouri resources, such as corncob waste and methane from landfills.

"Missouri's corn can supply raw material for natural gas tanks for all the cars in the United States," said Peter Pfeifer, professor and chair of the Department of Physics in the MU College of Arts and Science. "The recovery of natural gas from Missouri's landfills would turn a pollutant into renewable energy and could provide an opportunity for economic growth in rural areas."

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Missouri business leaders support development of data center tax incentives in the state

DataCenterKnowledge wrote on the Politics in data centers in NY, TX, and MO.

The Politics of Data Centers: NY, Texas, Missouri

January 6th, 2010 : Rich Miller

In recent years we’ve seen data centers become embroiled in state politics on topics such as whether to build new state data centers to manage citizens’ tax and benefit issues, where to put those data centers, who to hire to operate them, and whether to offer tax incentives to establish a state as a destination for development. This week we’ve data center make headlines in several states.

Missouri caught my attention as I have been there a few times meeting with business leaders.  Rich Miller goes on regarding Missouri.

Missouri: The state General Assembly in Missouri hopes to consider targeted tax incentives that will help the state attract more data center projects. Business groups, including the Missouri Coalition for Data Centers, hope to build upon a cluster of enterprise disaster recovery data centers in the Kansas City, and boost interest in the development of the state’s abundant supply of limestone caves as data center facilities. Missouri is home to several existing underground data bunkers, including The Mountain Complex near Branson and the Springnet Underground in Springfield.

The Missourinet article referenced by Rich has good points.

Business leaders put data center incentives on legislative wish list

by STEVE WALSH on JANUARY 3, 2010

in BUSINESS, TAXES

Among the many issues to be entertained during the 2010 session of the General Assembly, which begins on Wednesday at the State Capitol in Jefferson City, is one that would offer incentives in a bid to lure data centers to Missouri. The push for the legislation comes from what is known as the Missouri Coalition for Data Centers, which is made up of businesses and local economic development agencies.

The argument is to classify data centers as information factories.

“A data center, basically, is a warehouse for information storage,” said Tracy King, Director of Taxation and Fiscal Affairs with the Missouri Chamber of Commerce and Industry, a member of the Coalition. “You can kind of look at a data center as a manufacturer. Instead of manufacturing widgets data centers manufacture bits.”

Why is designation as a manufacturer important? The manufacturing industry can already take advantage of state-sponsored incentives.

“We’re offering those same exact incentives to the manufacturing industry right now,” said Ora Reynolds, President of Hunt Midwest Enterprises in Kansas City. “So, if you’re manufacturing widgets you get these incentives. If you’re manufacturing data you don’t. So, this is basically the same incentives that are already out there for an industry that’s been in the state for years and years and now we’re trying to bring a new industry in with similar incentives.”

Why do this, because the rest of the surrounding states do which is why they have attracted the big data center companies.

“Tax incentives at every one of our surrounding states are already in place,” said King. “For, let’s say a 100,000 square foot data center, they’re handicapped by about $15-million to do business in Missouri. So they’re not doing business in Missouri – they’re doing business in Nebraska, Iowa, Kansas, Oklahoma – who already have both tax exemptions in place and also some personal property tax exemptions or abatements.”

Besides the Tax Director and business leaders, there is support in the House and Senate.

Sponsors of data center incentives legislation have been found in both the House and Senate. Supporters acknowledge the proposal might face challenges during these tough budget times, but they insist that at the end of the day the state would benefit from such legislation.

You can bet soon after Missouri extends manufacturing status to data centers, there will be an increase in data center activity in Missouri.

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