Hewlett-Packard announced on Tuesday a new design for some of the world’s largest computer centers and says it could reduce power consumption in some cases by 90 percent.
The design, called Project Moonshot, replaces the conventional microprocessors used in computer servers with the kind of chips used in cellphones and notebook computers. These mobile chips, which have usually run on small batteries, are designed as power misers, shutting down some inessential tasks and slowing others when placing calls or reaching the Web.
It is, for now, a specialty service for perhaps 50 of the world’s largest online companies, said Paul Santeler, the manager of H.P.’s hyperscale business. “Believe me, they’ll all be kicking the tires” on the new offering, he said. “For a Web architecture with tons and tons of users, where all the growth is, it makes a lot of sense.” The world is adding 7,000 computer servers a day, he said, most of them for Web activities like social networking and watching video.
The new design will use chips made by Calxeda, an Austin, Tex., maker of low-power ARM chips for servers.