Sponsors
  • Hewlett Packard
  • Microsoft
  • Salesforce.com
  • eBay
  • Amazon Web Services
  • Conduit
  • Curl
  • EMC Corporation
  • Force10 Networks
  • Intuit Quickbase
  • Keynote Systems
  • LiveWorld
  • NeuStar
  • ONEsite
  • OpSource
  • S60
  • Sun Microsystems
  • Acquia
  • Ascentium
  • awareness
  • BlueArc
  • Coradiant
  • Dixero
  • HiveLive, Inc.
  • Intel
  • Jive Software
  • Kablink
  • Kapow Technologies
  • LithiumTechnologies
  • Mzinga
  • Octopz
  • Panther Express
  • RightScale
  • SynthaSite
  • TripAdvisor
  • WebAsyst LLC
  • XBOSoft
  • ACM Queue
  • Backbone Magazine
  • Berlin Partner
  • CenterNetworks
  • Contentinople
  • Deal
  • Dr. Dobbs
  • Enterprise Technology Management
  • Fast Company
  • I Want Media
  • ITtoolbox
  • Mashable
  • MSDN Magazine
  • Next New Networks
  • PR Newswire
  • ProgrammableWeb
  • SitePoint
  • Slashdot
  • Social Media Today
  • SourceForge.net
  • TechCrunch
  • TechNet
  • Technorati
  • Topix
  • Webgrrls
  • Wired
  • WOW

Sponsor & Exhibitor Opportunities

Kelly Stewart
415.947.6236
kstewart@techweb.com

Media Sponsor Opportunities

Matthew Balthazor
(949) 223-3628
mbalthazor@techweb.com
Deadline for requests: July 1

Speaker / Program Ideas

Have a suggestion for a speaker or topic at Web 2.0 Expo New York? Send an email to: ny-idea@web2expo.com

Press/Media Inquiries

Maureen Jennings
(707) 827-7083
maureen@oreilly.com
or
Natalia Wodecki
415-947-6762
NWodecki@techweb.com

Contact Us

View a complete list of Web 2.0 Expo contacts.

Electricity as the New Internet

James Governor (RedMonk)
1:20pm Wednesday, 09/17/2008
Topic: Web 2.0 at Work
Location: 1A23 & 24

For too long, power distribution has been a top down, subscribe only model, but the electricity grids of tomorrow will be read/write, just like the Web. It’s a commonplace to talk about how IT should be delivered as a utility, but what about delivering a utility the same way the Web works? Utilities need to become more like the Internet: disparate, disconnected electrical grids will be joined up to give us one global electricity super-grid. Imagine the resilience: electricity which can route around problems. Think about how much more stable the super-grid would be if the excess energy produced by, for instance, Scandinavian wind farms on windy nights could simply be sold to meet capacity shortages in the US as people arrive home from work, or in Japan as they start to wake up.

What if the grid were smart, publishing prices in real-time, based on supply and demand fluctuations? And further, what if smart meters in homes and businesses could adjust appliances based on the real-time pricing (thermostats up/down, devices on/off, etc.) And what if, again like the Internet, the super-grid were read/write i.e. if you could be a producer as well as a consumer?

In this talk Tom Raftery will explain how this vision will be realized, which companies and geographies are leading the charge, and what you should to do to encourage the change.

Photo of James Governor

James Governor

RedMonk

Co-founder of RedMonk, the first open source analyst company. Work with firms like Adobe, IBM, Microsoft, and Sun, helping them to understand how the IT world is changing and how they should respond.

I live and work in London with my wife and son. I travel too much. I could live in a mud hut and only eat raw vegetables and still have the carbon footprint of a small town.