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August 6, 2008 7:58 AM PDT

Verdiem's Edison helps you get green

This blog has been updated with the correct default kilowatt-per-hour rate.

Sometimes it's the little things that count, especially when it comes to your carbon footprint.

When it comes to PC usage, those little things include turning off your computer when you're not using it. Enter Verdiem, with its free download called Edison, which it is offering to consumers to help with their PC power management at home.

Edison(Credit: Verdiem)

Verdiem has a similar product for large enterprise customers--and they of course charge for it. But Edison is free, and available at the company Web site, or from Microsoft.com/environment. Microsoft and The Climate Savers Initiative are both supporting the launch of Edison.

There are more than 1 billion PCs in the world, and each is responsible for an average of 1,000 pounds of carbon dioxide emissions every year, says Allison Cornia, Verdiem's vice president of marketing, adding, "Most people are really unaware how much energy PCs are wasting, and we want to draw a lot of attention to that."

I tried it out, and it seems easy enough. Download and register the program, and a window pops up. A series of tabs helps you customize your settings. Choose your peak work and non-work hours, and when you want Edison to save more or less power.

Using the "save more" setting while you're working will power down your display and hard drive after 5 minutes, and suspend your PC after 10. "Save less" means your display will be powered down after 30, your hard drive after 45, and never suspends your computer. There are several settings between those extremes as well.

But the part where you actually feel like you're making a difference is under the "Estimated Annual Savings" section. Once you plug in what your local power company charges for kilowatts per hour, Edison calculates money and energy saved per year, as well as how much carbon dioxide is not being emitted. After having Edison installed for roughly 4 hours, at the default $0.089 kW/hr, I'd be on track to save $30.85 this year in energy costs, 346.68 kW/hr, and 472.52 pounds of CO2.

It's Windows-only for now, but Verdiem says it will add an OS X-compatible version depending on whether Mac users show interest.

Originally posted at Crave
Erica Ogg is a CNET News reporter who writes about consumer electronics and PCs, mostly as chief correspondent for Crave. She's also one of the hosts of CNET News' Daily Podcast. In her non-work life, she's a history geek, a loyal Dodgers fan, and a mac-and-cheese connoisseur. E-mail Erica.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 3 comments
by pjt0070 August 6, 2008 11:37 PM PDT
It's an infuriatingly common mistake, but the correct unit for energy is kilowatt-hour (kWh), NOT kilowatts per hour.
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by fletchertheobese August 7, 2008 4:54 AM PDT
i installed this and the next time i booted up my computer everything started crashing
ive uninstalled it and its fine now
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by SirPerigrin August 7, 2008 7:26 AM PDT
This really isn't anything new... and its far from the best way to save power. Dynamic CPU Scaling saves more power than this by a long shot and is already implemented in ALL AMD computers and i should assume Most/ALL modern Intel chips. The power settings in the program are already available in Windows and for that matter Linux as well. How about we invest in Western Digital Green drives? AMD Low Energy processors? Turn on dynamic scaling for our CPU's, use more efficient power supplys? Come on... lets be practical here, theres a LOT of ways to save computer power usage and an alternate GUI to windows power managment is not amongst the top of the list...
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