22-07-2012, 04:39 PM
please send me ppt presentation on green computing
22-07-2012, 04:39 PM
please send me ppt presentation on green computing
23-07-2012, 10:53 AM
to get information about the topic " green computing" full report ppt and related topic refer the link bellow
https://seminarproject.net/Thread-green-...nar-report https://seminarproject.net/Thread-green-...port--7314 https://seminarproject.net/Thread-green-...ing--46292 https://seminarproject.net/Thread-green-...-judicious
26-10-2012, 01:19 AM
i have ppt for green computing.plz give me
27-12-2012, 11:17 PM
pls send the green computing ppt to jansidhina[at]gmail.com pls pls pls pls..
28-12-2012, 12:17 PM
to get information about the topic " green computing" full report ppt and related topic refer the link bellow
https://seminarproject.net/Thread-green-...nar-report https://seminarproject.net/Thread-green-...port--7314 https://seminarproject.net/Thread-green-...ing--46292 https://seminarproject.net/Thread-green-...-judicious
19-01-2013, 09:41 PM
pls send the ppt for green computing soon..guys:
18-02-2017, 09:55 PM
20-02-2017, 11:14 AM
Abstract
Green computing, green IT or the sustainability of ICT, refers to environmentally sustainable computing or computing. San Murugesan defines the field of green computing as "the study and practice of designing, manufacturing, using and disposing of computers, servers and associated subsystems-such as monitors, printers, storage Devices and networks and communication systems - efficient and effective with A minimal or no impact on the environment. "The goals of green computing are similar to green chemistry, reducing the use of hazardous materials, maximizing energy efficiency over the life of the product and promoting the recyclability or biodegradability of deceased products and factory waste. As efficient as possible in energy, and designing algorithms and systems for information technology related to efficiency. Green computing is the environmentally responsible use of computers and related resources. These practices include the implementation of central power processing units (CPUs), servers and peripherals, as well as reduced resource consumption and adequate disposal of electronic waste. One of the first green computing initiatives in the United States was the voluntary labeling program known as the Energy Star. It was conceived by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in 1992 to promote energy efficiency in all types of hardware. The Energy Star label became a common sight, especially on laptops and displays. Similar programs have been adopted in Europe and Asia. What is a light client? A light client (sometimes called a thin or thin client) is a computer or a computer program that depends heavily on some other computer (its server) to fulfill its traditional computational roles. This contrasts with the traditional fat client, a computer designed to take on these roles by itself. The exact roles assumed by the server can range from providing persistence of data (for example, for nodes without a disk) to actual information processing on behalf of the client. Thin clients occur as components of a larger computing infrastructure, where many customers share their calculations with the same server. As such, thin client infrastructures can be seen as the depreciation of some computing service through various user interfaces. This is desirable in contexts where individual fat clients have much more functionality or power than the infrastructure requires or uses. This can be contrasted, for example, with grid computing. Thin client computing is also a way to easily keep computing services at a reduced total cost of ownership. The most common type of modern light client is a low end computer terminal that focuses solely on providing a graphical user interface to the end user. The remaining functionality, in particular the operating system, is provided by the server. Thin clients are rooted in multiuser systems, traditionally mainframes accessed by some type of terminal computer. As computer graphics grew, these terminals went from providing a command line interface to a complete graphical user interface, as is common in modern thin clients. The prototypical multiuser environment along these lines, UNIX, began to support fully graphical X terminals, that is, devices running X server software, from about 1984. X-terminals remained relatively popular even after the arrival of others Thin clients in the mid-1990s. Modern UNIX derivatives such as BSD and GNU / Linux continue the tradition of multiuser remote view / entry session. Typically, X server software is not available on thin clients; Although no technical reason for this exclusion would prevent it. Windows NT became capable of multiuser operations primarily through the efforts of Citrix Systems, which repackaged NT 3.5.1 as the multiuser operating system Win Frame in 1995. Microsoft licensed this technology back to Citrix and deployed it in Windows NT 4.0 Terminal Server Edition, under a project named "Hydra". Windows NT became the base of Windows 2000 and Windows XP. As of 2011, Microsoft Windows systems support graphics terminals through the Remote Desktop Services component. The term thin client was coined in 1993 by Tim Negris, VP of Server Marketing at Oracle Corp., while working with Oracle's founder Larry Ellison at the launch of Oracle 7. At that time, Oracle wanted to differentiate its software-oriented To the Microsoft Desktop Products server. Ellison subsequently popularized the buzzword of Negris with frequent use in his speeches and interviews about Oracle products. Comparison of sizes - traditional desktop PC vs. Clientron U700 Customer Simplicity: Since customers are made of inexpensive hardware with few moving parts, they can operate in more hostile environments than conventional computers. However, they inevitably need a network connection to their server, which must be isolated from such hostile environments. Since light clients are cheap, they offer a low risk of general theft, and are easy to replace if stolen or broken. Since they have no complicated boot image, the boot image control problem is centralized on the server. On the other hand, to achieve this simplicity, light clients sometimes fall behind thick clients (PC Desktops) in terms of extensibility. For example, if a local software utility or a set of device drivers is required to support a locally attached peripheral device (for example, a printer, scanner, or biometric security device), the thin client operating system may lack Of the resources needed to fully integrate the necessary devices. Modern thin clients try to address this limitation through port assignment or USB redirection software. However, these methods can not address all of the use-case scenarios for the large number of peripheral types currently in use. Thin Clients have many advantages, so different people define light clients differently based one of its advantages. Below are the few common definitions and sentences that people often use to define thin client. Simply, Thin Client is no more than a computer, but with much less configuration (specifications / capacity / power), users can run all the latest Operating Systems and Applications (software), with the help of SERVER Computer that is connected to A Through LAN Means, In Thin Clients it is not necessary to install any OS or Applications, you only have to install Only in SERVER where all the thin clients are connected, all the OS and Applications will be executed in the server and the results will be shown in Thin Clients (User computers) Several users can run the same program simultaneously, but the program only needs to be loaded once with a central server. In traditional PCs, we have to install the operating system and applications locally and use their local resources (CPU, RAM, HDD) for processing and storage, where as in Thin Client you do not need to install any OS or applications in Thin Client, Access the operating system and applications from the server. |
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