Jul 12
AT&T becomes the first telco to use energy-efficient Bloom Box servers, will power 11 sites in California
Posted in: att, green, Today's Chili Remember Bloom Energy servers, those low-cost, energy-efficient fuel cells born out of a scrapped NASA project? The company made a splashy debut last year, starting with a spot on 60 Minutes and a long list of early-adopting corporate heavyweights like FedEx, Walmart, Google, Coca-Cola, Staples, and eBay. Since then, we haven’t heard much from the company, but today she’s back — AT&T says it will be the first telco to use these refrigerator-sized servers to power its operations. For now, the company’s planning on using the technology to run 11 sites in California, a move AT&T says will cut its carbon dioxide emissions in half and virtually eliminate SOx, NOx, and other smog-forming particles. All told, its servers should produce 62 million kWh of power annually — once all of these servers are fully up and running sometime in the middle of next year, that is. We say good on AT&T, though we’ll really be stoked when these things start lighting up more average Joe homes.
AT&T becomes the first telco to use energy-efficient Bloom Box servers, will power 11 sites in California originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 12 Jul 2011 12:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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