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NCBCE Members Serve

Council For Women
Jane Martin, Qué Pasa

Teachers Matter Initiative
Thomas Vaidhyan, Aten, Inc.
Jon Beard, Knowledge Network Solutions
Craig Landwehr, Six Disciplines Triangle
Diego Aisenberg, Qué Pasa Media Network

NC Science Festival Sponsors
Biogen Idec
SAS
Inspire Pharmaceuticals
BB&T

Steve Brechbiel, Quintiles
Appointment to JOBS Commission
Caroline McCullen, SAS
Pam Townsend, AECOM


Healthy Schools Cabinet
Chris Kouri, Charlotte Motor Speedway

NC Principals Association Distinguished Leaders Program
WakeMed
RBC Bank
BB&T
GlaxoSmithKline
Progress Energy


Southern Association of Colleges & Schools State Council
Pam Townsend, AECOM

Arts Curriculum Feedback
Qué Pasa Media Network
Topics Education
Capstrat
Aten, Inc
Red Hat
RBC Bank
Eckel and Vaughan
Truliant Federal Credit Union
Samet Corporation


2010 North Carolina Summit on US/China Education
NCBCE corporations participated in this international event

Council on Educational Services for Exceptional Children

2010 College Application Planning Committee
Joanne Burden, Sports Endeavors

Competitive Students Committee of the State Board of Education
Joel Butler, University Health Systems

Blue Ribbon Accountability Commission
André Peek, IBM
Michael Brader-Araje, SunPocket


Blue Ribbon Commission on Charter Schools
Acton Archie, SAS

Ad Hoc Committee on School Leadership
Joe Freddoso, MCNC
André Peek, IBM
Bill Shore, GlaxoSmithKline


NC Science, Math, Technology Center Board
Susan Jackson, WakeMed

Southern Regional Education Board (SREB)
SAS Hosted & provided expertise
Anjana Bhuta Wills, Nandhini Viswonathan, Barbara Guidos, BD

NC Commission on Volunteerism & Community Service
Woody Dicus, Progress Energy

NC Financial Literacy Council
Verna Gessaman, RBC Bank
Leigh Brady, SECU

Confucius Classrooms in NC
Karen Ondrick, Lenovo

Teacher Working Conditions Survey Sponsors
AT&T
BB&T
Duke Energy-Carolinas
Golden Corral

Webinar Series
NCBCE Corporate Members
Local NC Chambers
Education Stakeholders

Jobs For The Future Conference
 Various NCBCE Companies

Race to the Top Education Grant Funding
Caroline McCullen, SAS

Joint Boards Meeting to Unveil Governor's Education Agenda
All NCBCE Member Companies Invited to Attend

World View: An International Program for Educators
André Peek, IBM
Tricia Willoughby, NCBCE

Emerging Issues Forum
Various NCBCE Companies

North Carolina Science Festival at the Morehead Planetarium
Thomas Vaidhyan, Aten



Member News

Aten, Inc. Educational Design Game Finalist

The North Carolina Business Committee Congratulates The Honorable Howard N. Lee After Receiving The NC Chamber’s Award for Distinguished Public Service


SAS ranks No.1 on the FORTUNE '100 Best Companies to Work For' 2010 list

Biogen RTP Wins Global Award

New Justice Fund Honors Henry Mitchell, one of the founding members of NCBCE

Business North Carolina won gold prizes in the magazine category for best feature and best personality profile at this year’s Alliance of Area Business Publications Editorial Excellence Awards.

Qué Pasa Charlotte Recognized As Best Hispanic Newspaper in the U.S.

Dr. Jim Goodnight was included in this year's list of the 100 Most Influential People in Business Ethics. The list includes individuals who stood out for their positive achievements in the business ethics world.
ethisphere.com


Donation to the AT&T Teacher of the Year Program by AT&T North Carolina Herb Crenshaw, Executive Director of Legislative Affairs, AT&T North Carolina, presents donation to Dr. June Atkinson

Ann Goodnight Co-Founder of NCBCE Member Company SAS Is Awarded State's Highest Civilian Honor


GlaxoSmithKline Recognized as "Friend of Education"

Cisco Fellows honored by NC State Board of Education for work on the School Connectivity Initiative.



 
 

02/05/10

In the 'clouds' with Big Blue


By Monica Chen

 

 


IBM Green 2010

DURHAM -- Gov. Beverly Perdue, IBM executives and educators from Durham cut the ribbon for Big Blue's new $362 million data center on Thursday.

As part of the grand opening, IBM announced the data center is showcasing a cloud computing solution with N.C. Central University and N.C. State University that will enable Hillside New Tech High School students in Durham to access educational materials and software applications. "Financially, it's cost-saving," he said.

In cloud computing, operations typically performed on individual computers are beamed up online, making them more widely accessible and easier to update.

The new data center opened with 60,000 square feet available and ultimately will total 100,000 square feet at IBM's sprawling campus in Durham's Research Triangle Park campus.

Durham County is giving IBM $750,000 in incentives over seven years for the new center. Although it won't generate very many jobs -- IBM had originally announced it could add 10 jobs to the RTP site but did not confirm those numbers on Thursday -- the center could become a draw as the company brings clients to the area to show it off, company executives said.

The center's green features will also be a plus in that aspect. IBM is applying for the Gold certification in LEED, or Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design, a national standard for green building.

The new data center has sensors that continuously read temperatures and relative humidity throughout the space, with the ability to cut annual energy costs by 15 percent. The facility also uses outside air to cool the data center for half of the year, collects rainwater for reuse and has a mechanical system that's 50 percent more efficient than previous designs.

Perdue focused on the facility's green features on Thursday in a speech to hundreds of IBM employees gathered at the building.

"You know in North Carolina, green is gold," Perdue said. "If you and I could cut our energy use back home by 15 percent, you know how much we'd save."

"People come here and they'll see our state..., and maybe some of those people will decide to come back here and retire," she added. "Ya'll are a tourist attraction for the state. I like that because I'm not paying for it."

Pat Kerin, general manager of Global Technology Services for IBM, used an analogy of a kitchen to explain the benefits of having a green data center.

Data centers must keep the computing components cool to prevent damage, and typically, stepping inside a data center feels like a cold storage locker, Kerin said. But just like in a kitchen, not everything has to be stored at freezing temperatures. At the new data center, temperatures can be changed and regulated for different areas for different clients.

"Data centers have historically been huge energy users," he said. IBM's 450 data centers worldwide make up for 35 percent of the company's energy consumption.

Construction of the new center employed 300 construction workers.


 
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