Cost Is Not Carbon: Why Cheap Systems Can Emit More
The assumption that cost-optimized infrastructure is automatically carbon-efficient is dangerously wrong. Discover why cheap cloud resources can emit more carbon and how to optimize for what actually matters.
Why Carbon-Aware Systems Can Cost More and Still Be the Right Choice
Carbon-aware infrastructure sometimes costs more than the cheapest alternative. This article explains why that premium is not wasted money — it's a hedge against regulatory risk, a reduction in technical carbon debt, and often, a better engineering decision.
The Double Standard: Why AI-Assisted Writing Should Be Normalized Like AI-Assisted Coding
Engineers accept AI for coding but criticize it for writing. Here's why that double standard doesn't hold up, and why the human → AI → human workflow deserves the same legitimacy.
Implementing Green Cloud Systems: A Practical Guide to Change
A step-by-step guide to implementing energy-efficient cloud infrastructure practices without disrupting development workflows. Learn how to reduce non-production infrastructure costs by 50-70% while improving developer experience.
Quiet, Always-On: How Development and Test Clusters Accumulate Energy Use
Development and test environments often run 24/7 despite being used only during business hours. This article explores the hidden energy costs of always-on infrastructure and practical strategies to reduce the carbon footprint of non-production workloads.
From Climate Science to Virtual Cloud Systems : Designing Green Cloud Systems
A climate scientist’s perspective on why Green Cloud is not about offsets or slogans, but about how we design, size, and run cloud systems — and why engineering honesty matters before optimization.