The homelab servers are most likely an extravagant waste (in terms of energy) but a fridge solves a practical purpose.My fridge draws orders of magnitude more than that and it, too, is on all day long. Not to mention the rack of servers in my homelab.
https://www.bosch-home.co.uk/product-li ... 875043033/ - mine uses 275kWh a year. Or 31Wh per hour. So around double the 15Wh Xbox instant on uses.
...
In missing my point so completely, you validated it.
Like most things, this is not an all-or-nothing proposition. Not everything has to be antagonistic in discussion.
You cannot tell others how bad they are, when you refuse to admit you’re also complicit. The degree to which does not matter.
I’m suggesting acknowledgment. Not forsaking the effort.
"... albeit only for a few days here rather than all summer..."Because it isn’t difficult to keep ones house close to the “low” temperature without using air conditioning. You close the windows and curtains in all the rooms in the daytime when it is warm and open them at night or in the early morning when it is cold and let the breeze cool the house. I have done it successfully many times with my house when it has got up to 35 degrees - albeit only for a few days here rather than all summer.
Maybe building standards are higher here to make that possible, but then given lots of the US has a continental climate (and therefore more extreme temperatures) that they’d have better standards than here where the Atlantic ocean moderates the temperature.
Yes, it will. Because it doesn't matter. Decarbonizing the supply is what matters. Concerning yourself with whether you leave devices on is foolish. You could spend that time and energy on actually doing something about the problem instead.Bear with me a moment.
Given the rise in popularity of wireless charging and the inherent wastefulness of the technology, this article seems hypocritical.
Who here hates this feature with Xbox, but wirelessly charges their device(s)?
The reaction I’m guessing I’ll get, in addition to downvotes, is that the power loss is micro in comparison. It doesn’t count.
So where’s the line?
If you’re invested in conservation and environmental concerns, but waste energy purely for convenience, complaining about this is hypocritical.
I’m not suggesting you can’t use a technology or feature. I’m saying the concept of “do as I say, not as I do.....because mine is a small thing and so convenient. But yours is so *bad* ”........ undermines your complaint.
Your comments translates to me as, "Give up, stop trying, you cannot change anything with your little efforts to save energy so why bother?" An attitude that will surely help us solve this problem.
Wind and solar energy aren’t 100% carbon free. Americans using twice the energy of Western Europeans because they have pointlessly oversized cars and don’t know how to build or run houses in an energy efficient way still uses a lot of excess energy and creates excess carbon.
Does MS still use spinning rust in the XBox?I really don't mind. I love that my PS4 Pro is ready in a few seconds. My PC is always on as it renders, downloads, and makes avaliable my own files to all other devices that I own (cloudsync). I had to cool my media center, so those fans run constantly too as it was overheating in summer.I buy cars that get a little over 5mpg, commonly dipping below that. If you want to be eco friendly, go for it. Me? I want access and speed now.
A century from now they will be cursing our generation for our laziness, meaninglessness and impatience that has in turn made their lives much worse. But at least you didn't have to wait 30 seconds for a game to boot up.
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In missing my point so completely, you validated it.
Like most things, this is not an all-or-nothing proposition. Not everything has to be antagonistic in discussion.
You cannot tell others how bad they are, when you refuse to admit you’re also complicit. The degree to which does not matter.
I’m suggesting acknowledgment. Not forsaking the effort.
Who are you talking about? Who in the world is "refusing to admit that they're also complicit" in wasting power?
I'm sure everybody reading these comments would readily admit that they waste some amount of power in the name of convenience.
Now that that's settled, can we have your permission to complain about the people and things that waste vastly more power than other people and things?
Does MS still use spinning rust in the XBox?I really don't mind. I love that my PS4 Pro is ready in a few seconds. My PC is always on as it renders, downloads, and makes avaliable my own files to all other devices that I own (cloudsync). I had to cool my media center, so those fans run constantly too as it was overheating in summer.I buy cars that get a little over 5mpg, commonly dipping below that. If you want to be eco friendly, go for it. Me? I want access and speed now.
A century from now they will be cursing our generation for our laziness, meaninglessness and impatience that has in turn made their lives much worse. But at least you didn't have to wait 30 seconds for a game to boot up.
Have to ask, because after replacing the boot drive in a couple of PCs with SSD, cold startup times are less (discounting POST time) than warm start used to be with Win10. A 15-yr-old homebrew with Gigabyte motherboard, 8G RAM, and Intel Core2 Extreme (pre-i-series Core), after POST, cold-starts in <30 sec to login prompt. Similar in a 10-yr-old ASUS laptop (1st gen i-5), after choosing Win10 from the Grub menu. For my purposes, that's "instant on" - would only be faster if resuming from sleep. Before the SSD, similar timings were a minute or more. FWIW, Linux Mint starts (always a cold-start; no partial-hibernation fiddles) in 15-20 sec on the laptop after choosing it from the Grub menu.
FWIW, the more annoying timing is shutdown. Win10 even with SSD typically takes more than 30 sec to finish shutting down (power light off; screen goes black quickly). Mint is more like tick ... tock ... off most of the time.
So if my math is right, 9 watts for 24 hours for 30 days represents about 6.5 KW of electricity in a month to sit unused.
In my apartment I use around 200kwh of electricity per month in the winter, so that represents about 3.25% of my electricity use, even if I never turn it on.
Doesn't sound like a lot, but that's just one device. Do that with 2 more devices that draw 9 watts, and I'm talking about 10% of my monthly electricity use in a month. That won't make much of a difference financially, since the electricity rates where I live are around 5c/kwh, but in terms of actual electricity usage and emissions, it all adds up.
People may write stories like this off as "yeah but that's not really that much electricity" but it all adds up.
In my opinion, this is just about an attempt to gain attention/publicity, not about really saving the environment. For starters, in a highly developed economy, home energy consumption is significantly lower than industrial usage. As far as I'm aware, in the U.S., for instance, the share of home power consumption corresponds to about 40% of total energy usage. And seriously, I think everyone can agree that it is much more acceptable to waste a little energy in the name of convenience at home than to throw away energy at an industrial scenario (correct if I'm wrong, but I don't think a factory needs stuff like an Xbox)
In other words, about 60% is drained by industrial and commercial usage. According to official figures (EPA), about 30% of industrial and commercial energy consumption is wasted. If you worried about these and stopped trying to hold home users as fully responsible for saving the environment, you could probably save almost half of all energy usage.
It's not that we want power hogs, and I remember very clearly the my Xbox Series X offered me BOTH OPTIONS when I first started it. Instant power on mode is VERY useful, allowing you to play on your Xbox remotely for instance (you can't power on your Xbox from your cell phone and start streaming in energy saving mode, since it probably won't be connected to the internet et cetera).
The number of devices that drain more than that to do absolutely nothing useful, ranging from microwaves in stand by to TVs and computer monitors powered off, is simply ABYSMAL. But no advocacy groups would gain any publicity from that because it will be a lot harder to get meaningful data from the countless device models out there, including many from lesser known brands which will probably not care at all for the bad publicity.
The Xbox offers instant-on mode during initial setup and talks about its advantages. It really offers value for that, automatically updating software and enabling remote control features. I think technology has come so far to allow for users to have a little convenience in exchange for a little power usage. The real problem is when we start talking about devices which consume power for ABSOLUTELY NOTHING. Sure, I bet they could do better and use less energy for instant-power on mode, but the scale of the problem is much smaller than what is stated by this article.
Why would a battery charger consume significant amount of power when there's no batteries? Electric toothbrushes? Even TVs, it's not like you're gonna do anything relevant from afar and they don't really update themselves in standby mode, despite having significant energy consumption. And even if you were to update anything on them, it wouldn't amount to the multi-gigabyte downloads which can take long times with a game console. Downloads on these consoles can be really big, and you can actually mitigate some of this energy consumption with instant-on mode because you can install something on your Xbox, turn off your console, and the download will proceed. If you have energy saving mode, you have no choice but to keep your console on even if you're not really playing it, and that would consume about 7 times the energy consumption of instant-on mode.
In my opinion, this is just about an attempt to gain attention/publicity, not about really saving the environment. For starters, in a highly developed economy, home energy consumption is significantly lower than industrial usage. As far as I'm aware, in the U.S., for instance, the share of home power consumption corresponds to about 40% of total energy usage. And seriously, I think everyone can agree that it is much more acceptable to waste a little energy in the name of convenience at home than to throw away energy at an industrial scenario (correct if I'm wrong, but I don't think a factory needs stuff like an Xbox)
In other words, about 60% is drained by industrial and commercial usage. According to official figures (EPA), about 30% of industrial and commercial energy consumption is wasted. If you worried about these and stopped trying to hold home users as fully responsible for saving the environment, you could probably save almost half of all energy usage.
It's not that we want power hogs, and I remember very clearly the my Xbox Series X offered me BOTH OPTIONS when I first started it. Instant power on mode is VERY useful, allowing you to play on your Xbox remotely for instance (you can't power on your Xbox from your cell phone and start streaming in energy saving mode, since it probably won't be connected to the internet et cetera).
The number of devices that drain more than that to do absolutely nothing useful, ranging from microwaves in stand by to TVs and computer monitors powered off, is simply ABYSMAL. But no advocacy groups would gain any publicity from that because it will be a lot harder to get meaningful data from the countless device models out there, including many from lesser known brands which will probably not care at all for the bad publicity.
The Xbox offers instant-on mode during initial setup and talks about its advantages. It really offers value for that, automatically updating software and enabling remote control features. I think technology has come so far to allow for users to have a little convenience in exchange for a little power usage. The real problem is when we start talking about devices which consume power for ABSOLUTELY NOTHING. Sure, I bet they could do better and use less energy for instant-power on mode, but the scale of the problem is much smaller than what is stated by this article.
Why would a battery charger consume significant amount of power when there's no batteries? Electric toothbrushes? Even TVs, it's not like you're gonna do anything relevant from afar and they don't really update themselves in standby mode, despite having significant energy consumption. And even if you were to update anything on them, it wouldn't amount to the multi-gigabyte downloads which can take long times with a game console. Downloads on these consoles can be really big, and you can actually mitigate some of this energy consumption with instant-on mode because you can install something on your Xbox, turn off your console, and the download will proceed. If you have energy saving mode, you have no choice but to keep your console on even if you're not really playing it, and that would consume about 7 times the energy consumption of instant-on mode.
When the EU wanted to reduce standby power consumption of devices, it didn't force manufacturers to replace the standby feature with a physical switch.
Instead it simply passed a law which set reasonable achievable limits for standby power.
You want to use Xbox's remote play feature. That's cool.
But it can be implemented differently.
For example at setup time instead of having the "energy saving" vs "instant on" choice MS could implement a "Enable Remote Play? This will increase idle power consumption" choice.
That probably will drastically reduce the number of people who choose it.
Better yet MS could have added the necessary hardware that allows the console to be remotely woken for remote play.
Instead you go into a butt hurt fueled whataboutism rant.
There are some figures on the internet claiming that present-day TVs, which are a lot dumber, consume about 5w when off and there are a lot more of TVs around than Xboxes. Yet, I don't see anyone complaining about those, even though I'm pretty sure that their global carbon footprint is a lot worse.
In my opinion, this is just about an attempt to gain attention/publicity, not about really saving the environment. For starters, in a highly developed economy, home energy consumption is significantly lower than industrial usage. As far as I'm aware, in the U.S., for instance, the share of home power consumption corresponds to about 40% of total energy usage. And seriously, I think everyone can agree that it is much more acceptable to waste a little energy in the name of convenience at home than to throw away energy at an industrial scenario (correct if I'm wrong, but I don't think a factory needs stuff like an Xbox) ...
"... albeit only for a few days here rather than all summer..."Because it isn’t difficult to keep ones house close to the “low” temperature without using air conditioning. You close the windows and curtains in all the rooms in the daytime when it is warm and open them at night or in the early morning when it is cold and let the breeze cool the house. I have done it successfully many times with my house when it has got up to 35 degrees - albeit only for a few days here rather than all summer.
Maybe building standards are higher here to make that possible, but then given lots of the US has a continental climate (and therefore more extreme temperatures) that they’d have better standards than here where the Atlantic ocean moderates the temperature.
Yes, it will. Because it doesn't matter. Decarbonizing the supply is what matters. Concerning yourself with whether you leave devices on is foolish. You could spend that time and energy on actually doing something about the problem instead.Bear with me a moment.
Given the rise in popularity of wireless charging and the inherent wastefulness of the technology, this article seems hypocritical.
Who here hates this feature with Xbox, but wirelessly charges their device(s)?
The reaction I’m guessing I’ll get, in addition to downvotes, is that the power loss is micro in comparison. It doesn’t count.
So where’s the line?
If you’re invested in conservation and environmental concerns, but waste energy purely for convenience, complaining about this is hypocritical.
I’m not suggesting you can’t use a technology or feature. I’m saying the concept of “do as I say, not as I do.....because mine is a small thing and so convenient. But yours is so *bad* ”........ undermines your complaint.
Your comments translates to me as, "Give up, stop trying, you cannot change anything with your little efforts to save energy so why bother?" An attitude that will surely help us solve this problem.
Wind and solar energy aren’t 100% carbon free. Americans using twice the energy of Western Europeans because they have pointlessly oversized cars and don’t know how to build or run houses in an energy efficient way still uses a lot of excess energy and creates excess carbon.
In other words, you have no idea what you're talking about. Don't worry, we already knew.
I’m all for an “all of the above” approach to minimizing energy waste in general, and carbon emissions more particularly, but keep in mind that annual carbon output is measured in the gigatonnes. So this is somewhere below a rounding error in the carbon problem.
If the option is between shiny cool feature and saving the planet businesses will pick shiny cool feature, everytime.And I'm just looking into having my Xbox One on 24/7 to save power (and switch on time).
The reason - instead of having power to the other devices enabled by turning the TV out of standby - I'd use the Xbox to power the other devices.
Am I in a minority - sure, but these sorts of articles are annoyingly shallow.
The point is that the default should be OFF not ON, and turning it on should come after a page warning people that they will be using a significant amount of energy to save a few seconds.
Advanced users with specific needs like yours would still be able to go into settings and enable it, but changing the default to OFF might save 1 billion kWh a year.
Also consider states like California with power supply issues. Changing millions of Xboxen to stop using so much power would help with that.
Microsoft should fix this.
Bear with me a moment.
Given the rise in popularity of wireless charging and the inherent wastefulness of the technology, this article seems hypocritical.
Who here hates this feature with Xbox, but wirelessly charges their device(s)?
The reaction I’m guessing I’ll get, in addition to downvotes, is that the power loss is micro in comparison. It doesn’t count.
So where’s the line?
If you’re invested in conservation and environmental concerns, but waste energy purely for convenience, complaining about this is hypocritical.
I’m not suggesting you can’t use a technology or feature. I’m saying the concept of “do as I say, not as I do.....because mine is a small thing and so convenient. But yours is so *bad* ”........ undermines your complaint.
Reading this article made me disable instant on because I think I can live with that inconvenience, especially since i have a fast, uncapped cable Internet connection -- not too painful to wait 30 minutes for updates about once a month. It doesn't mean I also have to stop wireless charging.
If my situation changes, I'll flip the setting back. Good to have the choice.
My electric bill does a full breakdown. *Everybody* gets charged the connection fee (about $23 now, going up in fall to $25). If you have net usage (after solar credits), you also pay various taxes and fees. The usage and solar credits are variable items, and the only things you can actually control. Usage and credits (for now, as long as net metering survives) are TOU, varying from a low of just under 10c/kwh (winter overnight, with EV charging credit) to just under 30c/kwh (summer evening peak). That's very much on the low side for California, and maybe even competitive with the rest of the US. Where's it 5c?So if my math is right, 9 watts for 24 hours for 30 days represents about 6.5 KW of electricity in a month to sit unused.
In my apartment I use around 200kwh of electricity per month in the winter, so that represents about 3.25% of my electricity use, even if I never turn it on.
Doesn't sound like a lot, but that's just one device. Do that with 2 more devices that draw 9 watts, and I'm talking about 10% of my monthly electricity use in a month. That won't make much of a difference financially, since the electricity rates where I live are around 5c/kwh, but in terms of actual electricity usage and emissions, it all adds up.
People may write stories like this off as "yeah but that's not really that much electricity" but it all adds up.
Not to quibble, but are you paying an actual 5c/kwh? A lot of people see the generation cost and don’t factor in transmission fees.
I pay a $10 a month connection fee. Then I am billed at 7.1c/kWh for generation and 4.2c/kWh for transmission. So my real cost is 11.3c/kwh.
Most people I know see the cost on their bill, but don’t look closer at the cost break down as of course their utility wants to only mention generation cost in big font.
Bear with me a moment.
Given the rise in popularity of wireless charging and the inherent wastefulness of the technology, this article seems hypocritical.
Who here hates this feature with Xbox, but wirelessly charges their device(s)?
The reaction I’m guessing I’ll get, in addition to downvotes, is that the power loss is micro in comparison. It doesn’t count.
So where’s the line?
If you’re invested in conservation and environmental concerns, but waste energy purely for convenience, complaining about this is hypocritical.
I’m not suggesting you can’t use a technology or feature. I’m saying the concept of “do as I say, not as I do.....because mine is a small thing and so convenient. But yours is so *bad* ”........ undermines your complaint.
I wireless charge my phone once a day, twice at most on rare occasions, For a total of what? 20W a day maybe
My xbox series S is consuming 9w an hour all day.
Reading this article made me disable instant on because I think I can live with that inconvenience, especially since i have a fast, uncapped cable Internet connection -- not too painful to wait 30 minutes for updates about once a month. It doesn't mean I also have to stop wireless charging.
If my situation changes, I'll flip the setting back. Good to have the choice.
...
Perhaps because at-idle, the Xbox is far more powerful than a Switch at full-song.
And you don't see that as a huge problem?
At idle, things would ideally take no power, because they're idle.
Bear with me a moment.
Given the rise in popularity of wireless charging and the inherent wastefulness of the technology, this article seems hypocritical.
Who here hates this feature with Xbox, but wirelessly charges their device(s)?
The reaction I’m guessing I’ll get, in addition to downvotes, is that the power loss is micro in comparison. It doesn’t count.
So where’s the line?
If you’re invested in conservation and environmental concerns, but waste energy purely for convenience, complaining about this is hypocritical.
I’m not suggesting you can’t use a technology or feature. I’m saying the concept of “do as I say, not as I do.....because mine is a small thing and so convenient. But yours is so *bad* ”........ undermines your complaint.
I wireless charge my phone once a day, twice at most on rare occasions, For a total of what? 20W a day maybe
My xbox series S is consuming 9w an hour all day.
Reading this article made me disable instant on because I think I can live with that inconvenience, especially since i have a fast, uncapped cable Internet connection -- not too painful to wait 30 minutes for updates about once a month. It doesn't mean I also have to stop wireless charging.
If my situation changes, I'll flip the setting back. Good to have the choice.
We (humans in general) have a tendency to point out what's wrong with others and never turn that same lens on ourselves. I'm as guilty as the next person.
It was not my intent to suggest people should stop wirelessly charging. Just recognize the inherent hypocrisy. Will it move the needle? One person? No. But we're not talking about just one person here.
Hope that makes some sense.
So if my math is right, 9 watts for 24 hours for 30 days represents about 6.5 KW of electricity in a month to sit unused.
In my apartment I use around 200kwh of electricity per month in the winter, so that represents about 3.25% of my electricity use, even if I never turn it on.
Doesn't sound like a lot, but that's just one device. Do that with 2 more devices that draw 9 watts, and I'm talking about 10% of my monthly electricity use in a month. That won't make much of a difference financially, since the electricity rates where I live are around 5c/kwh, but in terms of actual electricity usage and emissions, it all adds up.
People may write stories like this off as "yeah but that's not really that much electricity" but it all adds up.
Not to quibble, but are you paying an actual 5c/kwh? A lot of people see the generation cost and don’t factor in transmission fees.
I pay a $10 a month connection fee. Then I am billed at 7.1c/kWh for generation and 4.2c/kWh for transmission. So my real cost is 11.3c/kwh.
Most people I know see the cost on their bill, but don’t look closer at the cost break down as of course their utility wants to only mention generation cost in big font.
Are you really saying that during its normal boot is uses 72000% as much power as during normal running? That'd do more than dim the lights![]()
The reason I've been keeping my console on Instant on is when I need to play a game, say, once or twice a week I don't want to wait for a multi gigabyte update. However given the amount of energy waste I switched it back to the energy saver mode
The article conflates the S and the X. Do they really draw the same on idle?
The article conflates the S and the X. Do they really draw the same on idle?
I don't see why they wouldn't. It's in sort of a sleep mode and the only real difference between them is the amount of RAM (that I can think of) while idling. I don't even think that really matters as most of the instant on stuff is on it's persistent storage.
Britain's climate is largely much milder compared to large portions of the US. Your houses are probably much smaller as well (on average). We have large portions of our population living in areas where AC/Heating is actually a requirement not to die.It’s kind of hard to compare on just gross numbers. Nowhere in the U.S. is as poor as Romania or Poland, for instance. Climate makes a huge difference (Californians aren’t particularly low energy users in other ways, but the climate requires relatively little heating/cooling compared to many others). Also depends on whether electric is used for heating (as opposed to natgas or fuel oil).To put that 10MWH inperspective, except for a few countries in Europe the average EU household consumes around 4MWH per year.To put that 78 kWH into perspective, the average US household consumes a little over 10 MWH per year.
https://www.eia.gov/tools/faqs/faq.php?id=97&t=3
https://www.odyssee-mure.eu/publication ... lling.html
Even rich people in Britain only use 4-5 MW a year.
Britain's climate is largely much milder compared to large portions of the US. Your houses are probably much smaller as well (on average). We have large portions of our population living in areas where AC/Heating is actually a requirement not to die.It’s kind of hard to compare on just gross numbers. Nowhere in the U.S. is as poor as Romania or Poland, for instance. Climate makes a huge difference (Californians aren’t particularly low energy users in other ways, but the climate requires relatively little heating/cooling compared to many others). Also depends on whether electric is used for heating (as opposed to natgas or fuel oil).To put that 10MWH inperspective, except for a few countries in Europe the average EU household consumes around 4MWH per year.To put that 78 kWH into perspective, the average US household consumes a little over 10 MWH per year.
https://www.eia.gov/tools/faqs/faq.php?id=97&t=3
https://www.odyssee-mure.eu/publication ... lling.html
Even rich people in Britain only use 4-5 MW a year.
Britain's climate is largely much milder compared to large portions of the US. Your houses are probably much smaller as well (on average). We have large portions of our population living in areas where AC/Heating is actually a requirement not to die.It’s kind of hard to compare on just gross numbers. Nowhere in the U.S. is as poor as Romania or Poland, for instance. Climate makes a huge difference (Californians aren’t particularly low energy users in other ways, but the climate requires relatively little heating/cooling compared to many others). Also depends on whether electric is used for heating (as opposed to natgas or fuel oil).To put that 10MWH inperspective, except for a few countries in Europe the average EU household consumes around 4MWH per year.To put that 78 kWH into perspective, the average US household consumes a little over 10 MWH per year.
https://www.eia.gov/tools/faqs/faq.php?id=97&t=3
https://www.odyssee-mure.eu/publication ... lling.html
Even rich people in Britain only use 4-5 MW a year.
In the long run, it's a lifestyle choice to live like that. There's no particular reason why it would be impossible for Americans to live in reasonably-sized homes in temperate climates, rather than McMansions in deserts and snowfields.