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System Center and the Green Client
Jeff WettlauferSr. Technical Product ManagerSystem CenterMicrosoft
Kim JohnsonSr. Product PlannerSystem CenterMicrosoftSession Code: MGT306
Agenda
Microsoft’s Role Windows and Power Management Power Management and System CenterThe phased approach with Configuration Manager 2007 R3
Microsoft’s Environmental Mission
Technology Leadership and InnovationLeverage Technology for Positive Impact
Global Partnerships Partner for Global Impact
Environmental PracticesDrive Corporate Sustainable Practices and Environmental Stewardship
Windows Energy Efficiency Vision
The Windows OS enables the most energy-efficient computing platform, regardless of underlying hardware, attached devices or software workload
Idle Efficiency Workload Scaling Always Available Self-Diagnosing Standards-Based Management Extensible
The next generation of Power“Low Power” state redefined in Windows Vista
Improved in Windows 7Deep focus on idle efficiencyCore platform, background activity and device improvementsTools and diagnostics
Microsoft Desktop Energy Savings Calculator
demo
link
Just kidding
Barriers to Adoption
User Impact/ ProductivityCostHardware Support Business runs after hoursCentralized Reporting
Configuration Manager 2007 R3
Vision: Enable Configuration Manager to further reduce the operational costs of IT by providing basic power management features native to the Windows platform
User Focused
‘Sleep’ mode Policy based Data
Integrity
Power Management ScopeClient Scenarios
Based on Stand by/Sleep
Wake up for Management
Dashboards of current power state
Power Management Policy Create and Set
Report Savings
Power Planning
Power Policy Configuration
and Application
Power Configuration
Monitoring and
Remediation
Power Savings Reporting
System Center Power ManagementMonitor current power state and consumptions
Plan and create a power management policy, check for exceptions
Apply power management policy
Check compliance and remediate non-compliance.
Report saving in power consumption, environmental impact, and costs.
Phase 1: Monitor current state and consumption
Enable Power Management Client AgentHardware Inventory Client Agent required
Gather power consumption and carbon footprint per collectionMachine utilization trends per collection based on user activity
Peak, non-peak and zero activity timesCurrent power settings used by machines Calculate energy consumption (WATT, $ and CO2 footprint)
Power Management Setup and Monitoring
demo
Machine and User Activity Report
Power capability report
Power Consumption DataEnergy consumed/hour
(Watts)
Energy Star StandardMonitorPower consumed by standard monitor in active mode 28 73Power consumed by standard monitor in sleep mode 2 3
SystemsPower consumed by standard desktop in active mode 60 84Power consumed by standard desktop in sleep mode 4 6
Power consumed by standard laptop in active mode 16 20Power consumed by standard laptop in sleep mode 1 1
Phase 2: Plan and create power management policy
Analyze the data and define right power policy based on user activity.Examples:
User activity is heavy 8 – 11 AM , decrease 11 AM – 1 PM, and picks up again 1 – 4:30 PM91% of people zero activity by 5 PM 91% of people zero activity by 4 PM on Friday %98 of people zero activity during weekend
Look for machines that can’t support power managementExclude machines that shouldn’t be managed for powerDefine policy for each facility (organization, department)Define different policy for peak and non peak timesOut of the box power policies
Balanced, Power saver, High performance (XP, Vista, 7)Customize out of the box power policies
Configuring Power Managementdemo
Power plan name Vista, Win 7 and Server 2008 XP and Server 2003 Power saver Apply Power Saver power plan Apply Minimal power management power scheme
Balanced Apply Balance power plan Apply Home/Office Desk power scheme
High performance Apply High performance power plan Apply Always On power scheme
Power Policy Properties
Phase 3: Apply power management policy
Allow power policy to be applied at the collection levelPlaces focus on Collection architecture
Define peak and non-peak time for collectionsDefine policy exceptions When multiple policies applied choose less or most restrictiveAllow machine to wake up per collection (if under AC) during specified time to check for other ConfigMgr policy
Phase 4: Check Compliance and Report savings
Various power settings inventoryDisplay peak and nonpeak time for user activityReports are run by collectionSelect a time period and report:
Power consumption (kwh)Power cost ($) CO2 savings
Reporting on Power Managementdemo
Centralize Power ManagementEnvironmental
TechnologyMaximize User Participation
Reduce CO2 Emissions/Save Energy
Reduce Power Costs
Analyze Operations/Monitor Goals
Conclusion
Power Management plays a key role in Green IT New relationship between
HardwareOperating System Management Layer
Windows has redefined Power in the OSPower Management in the box with System Center
The roadmap for Power
TAP currently open - linkPublic Beta January 2010RTM H1 2010
2010
vNext
vNext
vNext
V1
2009 & R2
2010
2007 R2
2007 R2
2007 SP1
2008
2008
2007 SP1
2007 SP1
2010 & R2
2008 R2
2007 SP2
V2 and V3
2010
2011 & R2
vNext
2008 2009 2010 2011
R3
System Center Roadmap
Related Content
Breakout SessionsMGT301 What's New in Microsoft System Center Configuration Manager: SP1, R2, and R3MGT302 Microsoft System Center Configuration Manager V.next OverviewMGT303 Software Distribution in Microsoft System Center Configuration Manager V.next: Part 1MGT304 Software Distribution in Microsoft System Center Configuration Manager V.next: Part 2MGT305 Accelerating Windows 7 Deployments with MDOP, Microsoft System Center, and VirtMGT306 Microsoft System Center and the Green Client
Related Content
Hands on LabsMGT03-HOL Deploying Microsoft System Center Configuration Manager 2007MGT05-HOL Device Management with Microsoft System Center Configuration Manager 2007MGT10-HOL Introduction to Microsoft System Center Configuration Manager 2007MGT12-HOL Managing Microsoft Updates with Microsoft System Center Configuration Manager 2007MGT21-HOL Upgrading from Microsoft Systems Management Server 2003 to Microsoft System Center Configuration Manager 2007MGT23-HOL Deploying Windows 7 with Microsoft System Center Configuration Manager 2007MGT24-HOL Integrating Microsoft Application Virtualization into Microsoft System Center Configuration Manager 2007 R2MGT25-HOL Utilizing SQL Server Reporting Services with Microsoft System Center Configuration Manager 2007 R2MGT26-HOL Generating Asset Intelligence Data with Microsoft System Center Configuration Manager 2007MGT27-HOL Determining Client Health in Microsoft System Center Configuration Manager 2007 R2
Related Content
Interactive SessionMGT01-IS Microsoft System Center Configuration Manager V.next OverviewMGT02-IS Microsoft System Center Configuration Manager R2 Upgrade and Architecture
Product DemosMGT01-DEMO Microsoft System Center Configuration Manager V.next: End-to-End
Links and ResourcesSystem Center Nexus Team Blog - linkWhat’s new SP2 TechNet Documentation Library- linkConfiguration Manager downloadConfigMgr Product Homepage – linkConfiguration Manager Product Team Blog – linkWindows MDOP – linkWindows Server 2008 R2 Branch Cache overview – linkBranch Cache ConfigMgr Deployment Guidance – link
www.microsoft.com/teched
Sessions On-Demand & Community
http://microsoft.com/technet
Resources for IT Professionals
http://microsoft.com/msdn
Resources for Developers
www.microsoft.com/learning
Microsoft Certification & Training Resources
Resources
question & answer
Complete an evaluation on CommNet and enter to win an Xbox 360 Elite!
© 2009 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Microsoft, Windows, Windows Vista and other product names are or may be registered trademarks and/or trademarks in the U.S. and/or other countries.The information herein is for informational purposes only and represents the current view of Microsoft Corporation as of the date of this presentation. Because Microsoft must respond to changing market conditions, it should not be interpreted to be a commitment on the part of Microsoft, and Microsoft cannot guarantee the accuracy of any information provided after the date of this presentation. MICROSOFT MAKES NO WARRANTIES, EXPRESS,
IMPLIED OR STATUTORY, AS TO THE INFORMATION IN THIS PRESENTATION.
Requirements for Power Management
Configuration Manager 2007 SP2/R3Windows XP SP3, Windows Vista SP1, Windows 7Windows Server 2003, 2008, 2008 R2Hardware Supporting of power management
Key Concepts to Power ManagementWord/Phrase/Acronym DefinitionPower Plan A define set of power related settings that is bound together to form a
higher level policy
kWh The kilowatt hour, also written kilowatt-hour (symbol kW·h, kW h or kWh) is a unit of energy equal to 3.6 megajoules
CO2 footprint Pollution prevented. Acres of trees planted, number of cars removed.
Peak time The time of the day in which work hours are in effect, also reflects a time of work without interruptions and a less evasive power profile.
Non Peak time The time of the day in which work hours are not in affect. Also reflects a time of minimal work and a more evasive power profile
Noisy application An application that makes the system busy while a user is not at the machine thus making it not able to sleep
User Activity Keyboard and mouse activity generated by user.
Work week Typically Monday – Friday , 8 AM - 5 PM.
Scheduled Wake The ability of the system to wake itself via the RTC.