HP meets ENERGY STAR 4.0

Sledgehammer70Sledgehammer70 California Icrontian
edited March 2007 in Science & Tech
HP announced today that they are the first in the industry to produce configurable PCs that meet the strict guidelines of the ENERGY STAR® 4.0 standards. The ENERGY STAR® 4.0 standard is the new, stringent energy-efficiency specification from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

The ENERGY STAR specification for computers was introduced in September of 2004. The specifications for these very stringent tests have been changing faster than the builders can make PCs. But in this case, HP has created a handful of HP Compaq Desktop PCs that meet the ENERGY STAR criteria. HP’s current energy-efficient desktops in the dc5700 series are priced at $899 and $959 and include Intel Core 2 Duo processors.

The ENERGY STAR® 4.0 standard doesn't target the typical home user, however. The base savings in HP’s offerings is roughly $6 to $56 per computer. That's $0.50 to $5 saving a month on your energy bill, so a user with one PC will not benefit much. But a business of, say, 20,000 employees (each with a PC) could save $10,000 to $93,000 per month. I know many companies that could use these saving on their bottom line.

As other companies such as Nvidia, ATI, HP, Fujitsu, Intel and many others strive to create energy efficient hardware, we will only benefit in the long run from lower power consuming products.

Comments

  • RWBRWB Icrontian
    edited March 2007
    As other companies such as Nvidia, ATI, HP, Fujitsu, Intel and many others strive to create energy efficient hardware, we will only benefit in the long run from lower power consuming products.

    :skeptic:
  • Sledgehammer70Sledgehammer70 California Icrontian
    edited March 2007
    The keyword is Strive... but than again these are not high-end Dx10 machines
  • RADARADA Apple Valley, CA Member
    edited March 2007
    The keyword is Strive... but than again these are not high-end Dx10 machines

    LOL! "He said "Strive""

    *thinks RADA as he continues to install a 250v/20A circuit in the computer room, in anticipation of his next Uber-computer build.......
  • Sledgehammer70Sledgehammer70 California Icrontian
    edited March 2007
    I don't know what people need with 1000 watt PC's I mean really... what is the point again?
  • RADARADA Apple Valley, CA Member
    edited March 2007
    I don't know what people need with 1000 watt PC's I mean really... what is the point again?

    Maximum PC shows the latest monster Video cards with 8-pin power connectors.. can't remember the wattage they will require, I'll post it when I get home.
  • ThraxThrax 🐌 Austin, TX Icrontian
    edited March 2007
    RADA wrote:
    Maximum PC shows the latest monster Video cards with 8-pin power connectors.. can't remember the wattage they will require, I'll post it when I get home.

    <s>SLI</s> CF R600s are crushing 1kw PSUs from big name companies.
  • Sledgehammer70Sledgehammer70 California Icrontian
    edited March 2007
    Thrax wrote:
    <s>SLI</s> CF R600s are crushing 1kw PSUs from big name companies.

    I saw OCZ just pushed out a 1010watt PSU... Good God!!! leave that beast running a video game for a week in the summer and you might just get a knock on your door from your local energy company.

    SLI with 7 series GPU's was getting up there, but these 8 series and R600 chips are beyond their limits...
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