Trial to use computers to heat homes

Computer servers that generate heat while crunching numbers will be trialled in five homes in the Netherlands.

An energy company is joining forces with a tech start-up to harness computing power to heat homes in the Netherlands.

Eneco, a Dutch-based energy company with more than 2 million customers, on Tuesday said it is installing "e-Radiators" - computer servers that generate heat while crunching numbers - in five homes across the Netherlands in a trial to see if their warmth could be a commercially viable alternative for traditional radiators.

The technology is the brainchild of the Dutch start-up company Nerdalize, whose founders claim to have developed the idea after huddling near a laptop to keep warm after their home's thermostat broke and jokingly suggesting buying 100 laptops.

"Ten minutes later, we thought: 'That's not such a crazy idea,'" said Boaz Leupe, one of Nerdalize's founders.

Nerdalize says its e-Radiators offer companies or research institutes a cheaper alternative to housing servers in data centres. And because Nerdalize foots the power bill for the radiators, Eneco customers get the warmth they generate for free.

The companies said the environment wins, too, because energy is effectively used twice in the new system - to power the servers and to heat rooms.

The servers used in the system can be connected by cloud computing. Eneco said the computers will be used by institutions including the Leiden University Medical Centre to run complex calculations in their research.

The trial will run at least through the end of the year. When it is completed, the companies will decide whether to make the system available to more customers.


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Source: AAP



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