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Leaving computers on overnight = $2.8 billion a year
Posted: Sun Mar 29, 2009 11:53 pm
by Executioner
Admittedly I don't think much about it at all. I leave my laptop running overnight because I know it'll take five minutes or more to get things going in the morning -- not just booting up, but launching the various apps I start the day with, downloading my overnight email, filtering out the spam, and otherwise "getting settled."
But all the power wasted while computers are sitting idle overnight adds up, and one study has finally tried to measure it. The tally: An estimated $2.8 billion wasted on excess energy costs each year in the U.S. alone.
On a CO2 basis, that's 20 million tons of carbon dioxide, about the amount produced by 4 million cars on the road.
The full report is available for download here (scroll down to "PC Energy Report US 2009").
But big numbers like that become almost meaningless in an era of trillion-dollar bailouts, so to put the wasted energy in perspective, the study provides the data in terms you can better understand: If you run a company with 1,000 PCs left on overnight, you can save about $28,000 a year if they are turned off after hours. That's not chump change.
Of course, it's also a fact that your PC will function better if you restart it regularly, and nightly shutdowns can help you avoid having to suddenly reboot in the middle of the day when you'd otherwise be productive. So even though this little laptop, by my math, eats up only about a quarter's worth of power overnight, maybe it's a smart idea -- and ultimately a time-saver, too -- to shut it down after hours after all.
Via USA Today
http://tech.yahoo.com/blogs/null/130078
Hum...I leave my desktop pc at work on starting Monday, and I shut it down on Friday when I leave. I hate booting it up in the morning because it takes so long to finally boot and stabilize after all the company's crap is loaded. This also includes virus scanning after it has booted up.
Posted: Mon Mar 30, 2009 12:16 am
by DoPeY5007
At the office, to save money, they ask everyone shut down at night now.
In the past they wanted us to leave the desktops running at night so they can push updates.
At home, all my desktops remain running, and folding.
My work laptop just gets put to sleep.
Posted: Mon Mar 30, 2009 2:29 am
by canton_kid
DoPeY5007 wrote:At the office, to save money, they ask everyone shut down at night now.
In the past they wanted us to leave the desktops running at night so they can push updates.
At home, all my desktops remain running, and folding.
My work laptop just gets put to sleep.
Well if the system is folding it's actually doing something to be useful when left on.
Unless I think I will be using it again soon I shut all mine off at night or if I leave for the day etc.. unless it is doing something.
I run Defrag or Virus scans at night or when I leave for the day when I run them so then I leave the computers on because they are working doing something and I don't want to be doing that when I want to be using them.
Or sometimes I'll leave one on because it's downloading a 5 hour file on my crappy dialup.
Otherwise I never saw any reason to leave a computer on if it's not doing work! It just costs money for nothing, WOW we now have a study to show that LOL
I wonder how much the study cost

cratch
They could have just gave me a couple hundred dollars 5 or 10 years ago and I would have told them same thing :lol
Posted: Mon Mar 30, 2009 7:47 am
by FlyingPenguin
Home Workstation and server are on 24/7. I have to be able to access the workstation remotely from anywhere anytime. Two Media center PCs are also on 24/7 (and a Tivo or Comcast DVR would that I would have in place of them would use just as much power so it makes no difference). Wife's laptop is usually in sleep mode.
The other thing you have to take into account is whether the PC has CPU throttling. Most modern ones do (mine does) so the CPU throttles down when the PC is idle.
Posted: Mon Mar 30, 2009 11:25 am
by normalicy
Awh, heck, I don't think my computer's been off (except for restarts) for 6 years. Same for the server. Though I purposedly chose a Celeron 566mhz processor for that due to super low power usage (can't say the same for the 5 drives).
Posted: Wed Apr 01, 2009 2:06 pm
by b-man1
the costs definitely add up for businesses. we switched to wake on LAN for all workstations so that updates may be done without leaving them on 24/7.
Posted: Wed Apr 01, 2009 3:35 pm
by GuardianAsher
I never leave my computer running at night. It's a bit of a beast, and I really have no reason to leave it on. I do have a home server running 24/7, but it's an old P3 laptop that just sips power, and has a couple of e-sata 1TB drives attached to it for storage. And if I need my to access my desktop for whatever reason, I can access the laptop from the internet and send out a WOL to the desktop, wait a few minutes, then I have access. But more often than not, anything I need is on the home server.
Posted: Wed Apr 01, 2009 8:42 pm
by d_b
I shut mine off at night. The fans make it to hard to hear the TV that I leave on all night.

Posted: Wed Apr 01, 2009 10:17 pm
by mtg
my computer when put to standby will turn off all my fans even the psu fan which is nice idk how much power is used but all i see is the front led blink
Posted: Wed Apr 01, 2009 11:59 pm
by renovation
my puters on 24/7 except when i go out of town like i am this friday for maybe 3 weeks again to florida !
Posted: Thu Apr 02, 2009 12:51 pm
by darcy
if i am not on online, laptop is turned off.
bw, = which is better: turning it all on + off several times a day { laptop 'n' modem/router }, or putting laptop in Stand By mode, before finally shutting down @ end of the day?
Posted: Thu Apr 02, 2009 1:26 pm
by canton_kid
A Watt A Meter is a handy thing to have and often only $19 or so at Newegg and other places. I have 2.
Plug it into a wall or extension cord etc then plug the device into it, see how much power stuff uses over time if you leave it, or just use it and watch it to see what you use right then. I think they handle up to 15amps which is plenty for most things!
I tested my computers before but lost the papers I wrote stuff down on, also I have changed things around so much it would be different power use now anyway. Went from wireless lan to cable on one system, that should lowered power use a bit, but I also changed video card from ATI AIW to Plain card and removed drives since then.
Was interesting once to see how much power my BIG coffee maker used. 40cup metal, no insulation! Make a big pot and leave it turned on all day, heats the room and uses power to stay hot. Insulated it myself, holds heat allot better, runs less often, uses less power all day!
I used it at times at outdoor parties or gatherings in the park etc where there was no power and I ran it on inverter and batteries, and the Watt A Meter was handy to see how much power I saved by insulating the metal pot, it was a good bit of power saved too! Makes me wonder if I should insulate my deepfryer, crock pot, bread maker, and other electric cooking stuff LOL