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Posted on April 29, 2008 in P2PNo Comments »

This post was written by Melissa Chang

Bittorrent logoThe Green Lounge blog points to a video interview with BitTorrent CTO Eric Klinker in which the interviewer asked about the environmental impact of P2P. Not surprisingly, the guy who works for BitTorrent thinks torrents are very green. Ben Hall of The Green Lounge responds:

I’m not sure that having your computer continuously switched on so you can leech and seed torrents is particularly green, but Klinker puts a pretty good spin on it.

Read the full article here.

Posted on April 28, 2008 in Globalization, Travel, VideoconferencingNo Comments »

This post was written by Melissa Chang

Foreign airlinesVideoconferencing is commonly considered to be a green technology - because it lets people replace traveling for face-to-face meetings (heavy on the CO2 emissions) with computer-based conferencing. According to this recent article from Silicon.com, these claims are most commonly made for expensive, high-end videoconferencing systems - such as Cisco’s TelePresence or HP’s Halo. But two multinational companies who put their faith in videoconferencing are telling a very different story. Companies are frequently replacing trips to the company headquarters with videoconferencing, but are replacing those local trips with more international and strategic travel. So the “green” effects of videoconferencing are often being erased.

Read the full story here.

Photo by Micah Sittig