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Comment Re:Are there engineers working there? (Score 1) 42

Underground? You'll have to pump air in there or your staff will die.

And you'll need to send the waste heat somewhere, maybe into the walls but the square-cube law indicates that this is not scalable. A really big data center will need to pump waste heat out through a medium, liquid or gas. Water is the obvious choice. So your underground data center ought to have a hyperboloid cooling tower sitting above it. Seems kind of pointless to have dug that big hole after all that.

As data center requirements become more and more extreme, I imagine human limitations being supplemented or eliminated altogether (robotics).

In other words, that data center ain’t built for you, meatsack. Get your oxygen tank and mask on, and go swap that failed hard drive already.

Comment Re: Are there engineers working there? (Score 1) 42

What are you thinking? You can't just magic the heat away by building underground

The dramatic increase stems from hundreds to 1,000 GPUs packed densely into each rack alongside memory chips and liquid cooling systems..

Worked in data centers buried inside 2,000 feet of solid granite for a while (NORAD). Is there some new challenge maintaining liquid cooled systems underground?

Comment Re:Called it - Politicians backing off (Score 1) 32

We really still haven't had that major battery tech breakthrough that allows for $25,000 EV's with over 300 miles of range that can meet EU crash and safety standards... yet. I'd imagine that China is closer to the goal than most, though.

Until then, we really don't have mass market alternative that makes all ICE vehicles obsolete for lower income nations.

If 300 miles of range is the ideal end goal, we better be setting range goals of 500+ and not stop until we get there.

EVs kryptonite, is cold weather. Where range metrics turn into reputation-destroying nightmares.

Comment Re:Called it - Politicians backing off (Score 1) 32

4. The fucking new car price.

Just in case we forgot why new car sales are sucking hind tit, with lots FULL of unsold inventory at COVID prices. My local Ford dealer is so overstocked they turned the dealership inbound road into a one-way street. Because they had new cars lining the road on both sides.

Don’t even get me started on EV depreciation that makes a Maserati look like a 20-year old gold investment. Say it with me kids. Negative Equity. You’ll be hearing that a lot after the 84-month loan payoff results in a 48-month bone-us loan for the replacement battery.

Comment Re:feedstock (Score 1) 95

If "elite" universities hardly needing the money even suggest they allow and support buying someones admission,

If you don't think this happens, I have a bridge to sell you. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

Given the many scandals of recent times (a certain Hollywood power couple and their spoiled daughter turned USC rower come to mind), I absolutely believe this happens. The point I was making is reducing admission down to buying it makes a university a whore simply negotiating price. Why do thy cheapen themselves like that? They measure with grades and expect their graduates to be awarded with merit for four years of hard work. Selling admissions means I’m going to assume they sell degrees too. If they’ll go low, they’ll go even lower. For the same greedy reason.

Reputation-tarnishing bullshit for what? A few million into a 50-billion-dollar endowment coffer? That’s the pathetic part. They don’t even need the corrupt money.

Apparently, it has got cheaper recently: https://www.commandeducation.c...

Awww. Street corner hustler can’t snag the rich Johns anymore. Guess people figured out the actual value of education turned political activism.

Comment Re:Tell Me Why? (Score 1) 17

Tell me what Gaudi is and why I should care.

Tell me why I should care that Intel stopped contributing to an open source project.

Tel me why, if this is so important, you didn't fucking notice for 10 months.

Tel me why.

If you care about fashion you care. It’s fucking Gaudi.

Lets hope there’s not a Taci fork somewhere. Could get really ugly.

Comment Re:Add Random Latency to Trades (Score 1) 91

Imagine what the world could be like if we didn't take a large portion of the smartest kids in the country to have them work on how to skim 0.00001% of every financial transaction and instead employed them doing something useful instead.

History will see this as an absolutely insane waste of potential.

I mean... where else could we put all those sociopaths? We've already got enough politicians and lawyers. Stock trading is perhaps the least harmful thing they could be doing.

* looks at stock market stability and crash history *

How about we sic those sociopaths on someone elses market if you’re feeling that froggy.

Comment Re:Add Random Latency to Trades (Score 1) 91

The idea of a stock market was never conceived to allow for trading faster than a bunch of people could do manually.

What kind of logic is that? We will artificially slow-down trading volume/speed to match what was possible 100 years ago because nobody thought they could make trades that fast? Do we have to hobble investors to the speed of manual traders on a trading floor because that was what the founders had in mind?

No. Let's not...

If the status quo has helped create a stock market house of cards again, then perhaps no action isn’t the appropriate action. That’s how we welcome crashes, recessions, and depressions. Again.

Moving at the speed of Greed is fine, as long as Corruption isn’t tagging along for the ride. If this results in manual traders simply never being fast enough at some point, then we have disrupted the model significantly. Not unlike allowing hedge trading in Capitalism. Betting against success isn’t hard when failure can be easily manufactured for profit.

Hedging against success. Too Big to Fail. The stability of an entire stock market being reduced down to a “magnificent” seven. I think we can agree our latest Capitalist ideas to let Greed dictate the solution haven’t been the best, and probably should be illegal.

Comment Re:The Democrats have consistently passed legislat (Score 1) 91

You really fucked up this cycle though. You didn't give Biden a full eight years to undo some of the damage. So we are going to get fucked and fucked hard.

You seem to have mistaken others for the brain-addled one who chose to drop out of the fucking race himself.

And if you don’t believe HE made that call, it only confirms how fucked we would have been with four more years under that administration. The hell were you granting that gift to? An autopen machine, or a cackling hyena drunk on word salad sauce?

Lets not also overlook the most egregious and arrogant display of blatant corruption when Democrat Nancy Pelosi actually had the fucking nerve to defend Insider Trading as a job perk.

Comment Re:Add Random Latency to Trades (Score 1) 91

Nearly everyone's retirement is tied up directly to the stock market..

Unfortunately those with “steady” pension funds will find out how much of that retirement is tied up in the market.

RTO mandates had far more to do with sustaining corrupt commercial real estate prices than “collaboration”. I believe some even warned directly that failed commercial real estate investments would directly affect State-level pension funds. Wasn’t just CEOs who felt they had no choice but to RTO.

Comment Height Requirements (Score 2) 42

Chris McLean, president of Critical Facility Group, said that rack heights have grown from 6 feet to 9 feet over nearly two decades.

Do those come with a library rolling ladder mounted to the cable chase, or am I to assume I get a 6-month subscription to Shaquille O’Neal to maintain those servers waaaaay the hell up there?

Gonna have NBA height requirements and a vertigo test in the data center soon.

”OK, here’s the new hard drive we need to swa..dude, why the hell are you wearing protective fall gear?”

Comment Re:Perhaps (Score 2) 29

I think this statement comes from the tendency laypeople have of conflating computer languages and spoken ones. "Fluency" in python does not mean the same thing as it does in Russian.

What if your Russian is bad enough to be mistaken for Python?

(Sorry. I voice-activated a compiler trying to speak like a John Wick villain once.)

Comment Re:Perhaps (Score 1) 29

Instead of people being fluent in both they could have one department focused on communication and another on creating their tooling? Keep people focussed on what they're good at?

* Glances at completely separate US Military job designators for both linguists and programmers *

Those that know, know.

Those that don’t, soon will.

But I say let the Boss go first. Should be easy for the one demanding CrossFit-grade cross-training.

Comment Lead by Example. (Score 1) 29

The new chief of Britain's Secret Intelligence Service told officers this week that they must become as fluent in programming languages like Python as they are in foreign languages like Russian.

Does MI6 understand not even the US Military is dumb enough to assume every foreign language linguist is also a programmer?

Step right up, Boss. Show the rest of us how it’s done.

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