At the opening day of its user event in Las Vegas, CA announced new projects
focusing on emerging technology in the energy and healthcare space, aimed at
reducing datacentre costs by raising temperatures, and promoting "at the edge"
healthcare devices.
Chris Stakutis, vice president of emerging technologies at CA, said at a
CA World
08 press session on Sunday that datacentre power consumption was a key focus
area for the emerging tech division.
"Every datacentre on average doubles its power consumption every five years.
But most datacentre owners I talk to don't know what they're spending on power,
" he said.
"I've sat at the table with some very important CIOs and the mechanism
they're using is adding up the utility bills and sending round a spreadsheet.
You're not measuring or monitoring it at all today, and that's bad."
Stakutis added that approaches to cooling datacentres also need to be
revisited. He argued that, although datacentre equipment can be run at 90
degrees without failing, most firms aim for a much lower temperature to remain
within the warranty and because they do not have confidence in the equipment's
stability to raise temperatures.
"You can save five per cent of your cooling costs for every degree warmer you
run it. You just need to put in hundreds of wireless thermometers so you are
confident you're not exceeding any limits," he said.
However, Stakutis conceded that CA was "a little bit late in coming to market
with energy and datacentre products. The IBMs and others are all already out
there."
On the healthcare side, CA believes that the sector needs to move from
focusing on patients in hospitals to people "at the edge" - those with illnesses
who are not bedridden or hospitalised.
"Fundamentally the way care is delivered must change. It's expensive to take
care of sick people in the hospital," he said. "But while it costs thousands of
dollars a day to have people in hospital, it might only cost pennies a day to
take care of people at the edge. You need to let technology help."
Stakutis believes that billions of devices will enter the marketplace over
the next few years in the connected health space. The current focus among
technology players is clinical devices, such as those for monitoring blood
pressure or glucose levels.
"Our vision is bigger than that," he added, citing devices to monitor
exercise and activity levels and for mental healthcare.
"Mental health issues can lead to deteriorating general health. We're looking
at avatars, robots and virtual worlds, for example a robot that talks to an
older person at home to keep them company. That's just as important as measuring
someone's blood pressure."
Stakutis was keen to point out that CA's vision is not around telehealth and
monitoring people in their homes. "Connected health is about getting to people
with illnesses who are mobile," he said.
"Fifteen to 20 per cent of the workforce are sick and we need to keep their
health in check. This could be through touchscreen devices in cars or via text
messages."
CA will be starting a 100-patient pilot for monitoring diabetics in Canada
next week, followed in December by a healthy heart project with firefighters in
New York.
"There's a huge epidemic of heart attacks among firefighters. It's because
they sit on the couch all day eating potato chips and then suddenly, boom,
they're on," Stakutis said.
There are also plans to start a healthcare pilot in Belfast soon, and one or
two in Australia, although further details of these were not available.
Stakutis pointed out that one obstacle to the vision for healthcare
technology is the problem of sensors for managing the multitude of wireless
devices.
"There are more sensors coming online than we expected and it's a mess," he
conceded, pointing to the launch of the
Continua
Health Alliance, which was formed to deal with sensor management.
Although CA has been quiet on the acquisition front in the past two years,
its emerging tech work could see a change in approach. "My brief was to do this
in-house as there's plenty of money to innovate in this area, but there is
opportunity for acquisition later," Stakutis said.
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