HP Pitches Green Printers, Samsung Green Hard Drives
Source: Tom's Hardware US – Keywords: hp, samsung, printer Category : Printers
Chicago (IL) - If there is one trend in the IT industry that you simply can miss than it is green technology and we are seeing more and more companies increasing their product and marketing focus on this topic every day. Today it is Samsung that announced a more power efficient hard drive and HP, which announced a big effort to reduce the impact of its printers on the environment - reaching from printer-labels, reduced power consumption to the production of new printers using closed-loop materials.
Samsung promises that its EcoGreen F1 hard drive will consume about 50% less power than traditional hard drives and about 15% less than "other low-power" 1 TB hard drives. The company did not provide the exact specifications, but assumed that Samsung considered the 13.4 watt maximum power consumption of its own 1 TB hard drive as well as Western Digital’s Greenpower hard drives, which claim to consume at least 4 watts less than other 1 TB hard drives, our math would put the Samsung drive into the 7 - 8 watt maximum power range.
The reduction in power consumption is mainly a result of a slower platter rotation speed (down from 7200 to 5400 rpm). Samsung also has an advantage in this field as the company is able to reach 1 TB capacity with only three platters (334 GB) each, its rivals Seagate and WD use four (250 GB) platters. Interestingly, within this group Samsung’s mainstream 1 TB hard drive is the most power hungry drive: Samsung claims the drive consumes somewhere between 5.4 (idle) and 13.4 watts (seek), while Seagate for example rates its 1 TB hard drive at 8 to 11.6 watts.
Samsung said the EcoGreen hard drive will become available during the current quarter with a suggested retail price of $199.
In unrelated news, Hewlett-Packard (HP) announced a far-reaching eco-initiative mainly targeting its printer business. Besides a carbon footprint calculator (which is also offered by Xerox) and a printer power calculator, HP said it has implemented a "global paper policy", which is governing the sustainable manufacture and use of paper HP sells to customers.
HP said that it will aim to improve the energy efficiency of its ink and laser printing products by 40% by 2011 and will begin bringing power saving technologies such as its auto-on and auto-off feature to its LaserJet series in 2009. Additionally, the company will advance its program to use recycled materials to build new printers: 83% of the total plastic weight of the new Deskjet D2545, which sells for about $45, are made from recycled materials, according to the company. Later this summer, HP plans to introduce this summer a printer that will feature recycled plastic derived from the company’s "closed loop" plastic recycling system, which incorporates a variety of post-consumer recycled plastics, from HP inkjet cartridges to water bottles.
Over time, the company will put "Eco Highlights" stickers on its printers, which HP says will help customers identify environmental attributes of a product.
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If HP wants to be green, how about putting more ink in its tiny cartridges and allowing them to be recycled (i.e. REFILLED) easily
If HP wants to be truly eco-friendly, it can publish BIOS updates to existing printers and other devices to allow the existing millions of such devices to also turn off automatically, and potentially also provide an auto on feature perhaps through a wake-up signal from the data cable, since I assume the majority of such features are software rather than hardware based in nature.
Also HP could do a lot to become more eco-friendly by reducing the amount of materials that it uses to create consumables. Rather than having to replace an entire ink or toner cartridge, it should be quite possible to actually design cartridges for all existing and new devices with a receptical for ink/toner container(s). Rather than dumping or re-cycling the whole mechanism, the refill container is the only part that need be disposed of, the cost of the refill container should be substantially smaller to manufacture and purchase than at present.
If HP were to provide these changes to existing as well as new hardware, and reduce the cost of consumables, I'm sure that customers would be much more inclined to buy HP hardware and consumables rather than other manufacturers devices and cheap poor quality consumables.