- October 7th, 2008
- Filed under Technology
One might say that I’ve been addicted to efficiency for quite a while. Even before learning about the need to conserve fuel and reduce CO2 emissions, I would organize my activities and errands so that I could take care of them in as few excursions as possible. The logistics of ordering these tasks was almost an odd form of entertainment for a mind trained by late nights playing board games in college (computer science and engineering may have had some effect as well). These days, however, my mind has turned to other - perhaps more practical - conservation decisions involving hybrid cars, rain barrels, and energy efficiency.
In today’s post I would like to share some investigations that I have done with a couple of cool energy efficiency tools. Perhaps you’ve heard of vampire energy. I’ve suspected that some of my home appliances are vampires, and a few weeks ago I decided to start doing some investigation of my own by purchasing a consumer-grade energy meter to measure the amount of energy that various electronics around my house consume. I haven’t done much analysis yet, but I have found that during normal use over a month, my entertainment center uses 75.04kWh and costs me $10.20 in electricity. This amounts to $122.40 over the course of a year. When everything is in standby, these undead electronics suck down 36kWh in a month (I need to run this test with the DVR on another outlet). Leaving the system in standby for a year would still cost me about $60.
Last week, there was a new device laying on one of our office tables that I couldn’t resist asking about. It’s called an ecobutton™, and of course I couldn’t wait to take it home for some analysis over the weekend (yes, I’m a real party animal). The Web site claims that the the button will put your computer into a deep sleep, achieving power savings beyond what your normal standby mode can offer. I don’t have a desktop machine at home, but I did test it on my laptop from the Museum. The software is simple to set up. After entering a few numbers that it uses to calculate your savings, it’s ready to go. It’s also simple to use. When you walk off to a meeting, simply pressing the button puts your machine into power saving mode. The instructions say that the computer will awaken when the button is pressed again, but on my laptop I had to press the power button.
For my experiment, I made sure to disable all of the power management settings and only enable the mode for each measurement. Ideally I would run each measurement for an equal period of time, but this was a weekend project among other errands that had to get done (in as few trips as possible, of course). My hypotheses going in were that screensaver mode wouldn’t be much better than normal mode compared to “no monitor” mode, and that normal and deep standby would both be very close to zero consumption on a laptop.

So, let’s take a look at the results (Average Wattage = Consumption * 1000 / (Time / 60)):
| Mode | Time (minutes) | Consumption (kWh) | Average Wattage (W) |
|---|---|---|---|
| On | 162 | .07 | 26 |
| Screensaver | 57 | .02 | 21 |
| Display off | 173 | .03 | 10 |
| Normal standby | 700 | 0 | 0 |
| Deep standby | 94 | 0 | 0 |
Indeed, running in screensaver mode saved 5W on average, while no-monitor mode saved 16W. I ran the system in normal standby overnight, because when I checked it after about two hours it read 0kWh with an instantaneous wattage of 0W that seemed to occasionally spike to 2W and I wanted to see if anything would accumulate over a longer time period. Not surprisingly, deep standby also ran at 0W.
The lesson that we learn here is that deep standby is just as good as normal standby for our laptops, so the main benefit is that standby mode is easier to explicitly trigger with the button (rather than having your machine wait until Windows power management kicks in, or selecting it from the menus). As a side note, you can also use the pulsating glow of the button to practice stress-relieving breathing exercises (maybe there’s a Mac vs. PC commercial idea in there). I want to run this analysis on a desktop machine as well, to see if the button can save more energy in standby as the company claims.
Now, actual savings ultimately depends on the power management settings configured on our computers and requires a few assumptions and more calculations to estimate. It seems to me that the ecobutton™ could be a fun way to help us save a little extra energy (hopefully enough to offset the cost of manufacturing and shipping the buttons), and keep conservation in mind. As one of the Eco crew team members at the IMA, I’m on the lookout for technologies like these that can help us in being good stewards of the environment (hopefully while saving a little money and having a little fun as well). Stay tuned for more discoveries!













October 7th, 2008 at 7:55 am
No Mac version! But nonetheless, saving energy is always a good idea. Thanks, Ed!
October 9th, 2008 at 7:22 am
Nice post, Ed.
To take this in a slightly different way, I was watching an episode of EPIC FU and some ideas popped into mind that relate to this.
So, grab a cup of coffee and try and keep up with this video:
http://epicfu.com/2008/10/how-to-be-a-twitter-power-user.html
But make sure you get to the second half (beyond all of the crazy twitter info) and listen to the Andy Stanford-Clark interview. He talks about using MQ telemetry technology and twitter to make tweetjects. Yeah, what? Well, he says that they are like blogjects. Again, what?
These are “objects” that he then uses technology to make “talk,” that is to say blog and tweet. So, what if we could do some of that here? Could we make a painting or sculpture blog or tweet? Have the Rembrandt say “someone is looking at me!” or have Do-Ho Suh’s floor say “there are a bunch of people standing on me!”?
Or maybe we could make the museum into a bunch of tweetjects that let us know about the temperature and relative humidity in certain areas, etc., etc.
October 9th, 2008 at 7:38 am
Oh, yeah, here’s a links to Andy’s house on twitter:
https://twitter.com/andy_house
October 9th, 2008 at 8:33 am
Richard, thanks for the link. That’s some really interesting work. I’d love to have a real time energy monitor for my house.
It turns out that I have a little experience experimenting with pressure sensors, photosensors, etc. from my work at IUPUI, so this isn’t out of the realm of possibilities. Definitely something to noodle on.
October 9th, 2008 at 4:31 pm
Yeah, I like realms of possibility. Are you saying we’re gonna be having some tweetjects around here?