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Comment Re:Are there engineers working there? (Score 1) 36

How does putting it underground mean less heat? It gets hotter the lower you go, and on top of that the problem is heat generated by the servers themselves - where's it supposed to go in a room that's that well insulated?

If you'd had suggested building them atop mountains, you might have been on to something, but those places are typically hard to reach and thus construct upon, and you'd also still need to power them and, of course, connect them to the Internet.

Comment Re:Yes, New Buildings (Score 2) 36

I saw a video complaining they did just that. The problem was that the power plant was a bunch of mobile gas-powered generators and it played havoc with people living nearby, noise and air pollution.

If they'd declared it up front, it'd have been less of an issue, because they'd have been forced to build a little further from the city and probably given clean air mandates to adhere to. But Musk is cheap and figured out he could bypass that by pretending it was just a data center, and then bringing in mobile generators after the data center was built.

Maybe wind and solar mandates would work. And if anyone says "But the wind doesn't always blow" (spoiler, it almost never doesn't, but let's pretend to take that argument seriously especially as it does apply to solar) there's this guy that's in the big-ass battery industry who might be able to help.

His name? Elon Musk.

Comment Re:Perhaps (Score 2) 26

The more I think about, the more I suspect that's what she means. I mean, not everyone who works for MI-6 understands Russian, right? I assume the qualifications for working there are a little more varied given Russia is not the only country they have to deal with, and just because someone's fluent in Russian doesn't make them generically helpful.

What I suspect she's saying is she wants the company organizationally more fluent in these things, not all individuals who work there.

Comment Re:monpolies... (Score 2) 13

Funny. 44% is higher than the iPhone market share in the EU, and Apple has been unsuccessfully arguing it doesn't have a monopoly there. Seems they may have a point?

I don't think the EU is claiming Apple has a monopoly in the smartphone market, I think the EU is claiming Apple has a monopoly in the market for apps, etc., for iPhones, where its market share is statistically indistinguishable from 100%.

Comment Re:feedstock (Score 2) 89

considering how hard it is to get into an Ivy league college why wouldn't most of their students get As ?

That's an argument for employers not to care what the grades were, if all Harvard grads are good enough, and I'm sure there are plenty of employers who will take any Harvard grad.

But for the employers who wish to be even more selective, hiring only the best of the best (and obviously offering appropriate compensation because they're competing with the other employers who want the best of the best), it's useful for them to be able to use GPA to discriminate between the mediocre Harvard grads (who would presumably be outstanding anywhere else) and the high-performing Harvard grads.

Harvard does the students a disservice by giving most of them A's. And the smartest students are going to realize it and look for an institution that is more discriminating, where they can prove their worth.

I'm surprised that cover letters were ever a very good signal, myself. Didn't students always get someone else to help them write the letters anyway?

Comment Re:Utah (Score 1) 23

Ah Utah.. the state you incorporate in when you want the business friendliness of Delaware, but know you are going to be doing something shady and need a more crime friendly place to set up.

Funny, but I'm wondering if there's actually something behind this. Can you elaborate in what way Utah is friendlier to Crime? Utah does have a long history of multi-level marketing scams, but I think that has made the legal environment less friendly to fraudsters.

Comment Re:Nowhere near AGI (Score 1) 175

Regurgitation, aka an alternative to a search engine, has progressed but no progress in terms of reasoning or ability to design. I'd call that a zero result for AGI.

You don't know what you're talking about. Spend some time discussing a novel engineering design with a current-generation LLM with a self-talk reasoning overlay.

Comment Re:it's the complexity, stupid (Score 1) 26

Man I feel old, I remember the days when one wouldn't be caught dead having not anything at all against JS!

I imagine archaeologists of the future scratching their heads saying something like:

"What were those primitives thinking, not yet having anything for JS, the Double Helix Code of Zombotron The Magnificent! Savages! All Hail NPM!"

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