Rose: "The sun is too hot, now I shall die"
Cladosporium sphaerospermum: "Fuck yeah, strong ionizing radiation!"
I'm really hoping it pops before the Pitt Race track gets bulldozed.
Story for those not in the know, what's heavily rumored and circumstantially almost certain to be an AI datacenter operation is in the process of buying out Pitt Race at the height of its success from the already generationally wealthy family that owns it for what's rumored to be a 9-digit sum. The race track happens to be next to some major electrical infrastructure. Equipment from the track has already been auctioned off.
I was also kind of hoping the nuclear reactors might get started before it pops but that might be wanting to have the cake and eat it too...
I'm thinking sometime between right now and late 2026. It may be starting to pop already.
The guts of the data centers will mostly head for the landfill (or may get a short stint as cryptocurrency mining or HPC operations at most), they may get repurposed as conventional data centers or possibly warehouses or factories.
Counterpoints: The Great Depression, the impoverishment of the Luddites, the impoverishment of Gen. Y/Z/Alpha. The French revolution was an outlier, and the French aristocracy didn't even have the benefit of a massive heavily automated surveillance apparatus, much less the ability to even dream of armed killbots.
Is there even a good business model for superintelligence?
A pesticide for any planets crawling with pesky lifeforms you want to get rid of?
>"If we are adding in FreeBSD, Android etc, might as well also add in MacOS. They are all quite similar from a user point of view and all based off one or the other NIXes"
Not really. It isn't free, much of it isn't open, doesn't use X11 or Wayland, doesn't use any of the Linux desktop environments, and it really only runs on Apple hardware. Very different in many ways from Linux or BSD.
Although I think that throwing "unknown" and "BSD" into the Linux count is not valid.
If you are interested learning about actual science you can read the actual paper. It is not paywalled. Look up "speleothem isotopes" to learn about specific climatologic techniques for this study.
we still don't know why this particular civilization disappeared without a record of what happened.
We do have records. We just can't read them. The Harappan language has never been deciphered. There are about 5000 inscriptions known.
That droughts led to the end of Indus Valley Civilization has been surmised for decades, this study provided a much more detailed account of the process.
For people to settle in "untouched tracts of land" you need to have water to irrigate it. Large empty areas on Earth require water for them to be "tamed".
Conflating education with academic rank.
Both are not the same. A detail politics likes to ignore because that enables noise-making.
Your mode of life will be changed to ASCII.