I found that interesting too, thought it was a joke at first.
The only details I was able to dig up are in the Data Center specs [1], and they're pretty brief:
> Energy-efficient LED lighting is used throughout the data center interior. / Innovative power over Ethernet LED lighting system. / Each fixture has an occupancy sensor with manual override. / Programmable alerts via flashing LEDs.
I wondered what the justification for PoE lighting could possibly be, sounds like all the lighting is also functional as instrumentation.
All true. Right now 14/3 Romex costs about 3x more than Cat5. Copper is expensive!
LED lamps use DC power. The LED lamps that you can buy that screw into a standard Edison socket contain electronics to convert the AC line voltage into DC. This is inefficient -- generates heat and wastes power (though still not nearly as much as a traditional incandescent bulb).
By using power over Ethernet for their lighting, the datacenter can use cheaper, cooler, more efficient bulbs, and save a lot of money on the wiring too.
I can definitely foresee a future where new construction includes wiring for both line voltage AC and also low voltage DC. It could eliminate all the bulky transformers scattered around a typical house and save energy and money.
The only details I was able to dig up are in the Data Center specs [1], and they're pretty brief:
> Energy-efficient LED lighting is used throughout the data center interior. / Innovative power over Ethernet LED lighting system. / Each fixture has an occupancy sensor with manual override. / Programmable alerts via flashing LEDs.
I wondered what the justification for PoE lighting could possibly be, sounds like all the lighting is also functional as instrumentation.
Anyone know more?
[1] http://opencompute.org/specs/Open_Compute_Project_Data_Cente...