Since Anthropic launched we've been using it at a lot. It's the best programming agent I've seen so far: it gives concise answers, it can run shell tools a...
AI is not the whole cloud, it’s a fraction of the cloud.
The MIT Press article is from 2022, citing 2019 data. Datacenter tech and heat reuse extremely intensified the last years, so this data is clearly out of date.
Go explain to these people why “bigger DCs are actually better”:
Tell me where there is any proof this is meta fault ? Because they are near the datacenter ? Do you have any idea of the amount of water a datacenter consume ?
The video very clearly answers this. Like, multiple times.
No, they made affirmation, that’s not a proof.
For the first location, they say the loss of water pression AND the sediments are due to the datacenter.
They are getting their water from a well, if a well runs out, you get more sediments.
Is this your “clear answers” ?
We know that it is a tremendous amount of water because we can estimate and we can see the data of towns literally going into extreme droughts right next to data centers.
If this come from your video again, i again doubt your statements.
Datacenters dont make water magically disapear, it have to go somewhere.
You would see a release pipe, so the water is restituted, or vapor cloud, which should be very visible.
But we dont see any vapor cloud.
Not every datacenter is like elon datacenters.
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Not at all. Bigger datacenter usually use lower carbon energy source, try to lower energy spent for cooling and try to recycle the heat.
New datacenter reuse more and more the heat they generate:
https://blog.equinix.com/blog/2024/06/05/what-is-data-center-heat-export-and-how-does-it-work/
Real water polluter are PFAS producer, not datacenters.
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AI is not the whole cloud, it’s a fraction of the cloud.
The MIT Press article is from 2022, citing 2019 data. Datacenter tech and heat reuse extremely intensified the last years, so this data is clearly out of date.
Tell me where there is any proof this is meta fault ? Because they are near the datacenter ? Do you have any idea of the amount of water a datacenter consume ?
deleted by creator
No, they made affirmation, that’s not a proof.
For the first location, they say the loss of water pression AND the sediments are due to the datacenter.
They are getting their water from a well, if a well runs out, you get more sediments.
Is this your “clear answers” ?
If this come from your video again, i again doubt your statements.
Datacenters dont make water magically disapear, it have to go somewhere.
You would see a release pipe, so the water is restituted, or vapor cloud, which should be very visible.
But we dont see any vapor cloud.