Eric Schmidt apparently bought Relativity Space to put data centers in orbit (arstechnica.com)
from sabreW4K3@lazysoci.al to technology@beehaw.org on 03 May 06:08
https://lazysoci.al/post/25709332

#technology

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fullsquare@awful.systems on 03 May 07:06 next collapse

“People are planning 10 gigawatt data centers,” Schmidt said. "Gives you a sense of how big this crisis is. Many people think that the energy demand for our industry will go from 3 percent to 99 percent of total generation

I reasoned that the former Google executive might have bought Relativity Space as a means to support the development of data centers in space.

absolutely not peak of bubble type bullshit, please give microsoft-sized theranos more money, nothing weird or stupid is happening there

last time i’ve seen someone wanting to put compute in orbit it was cryptobros trying to avoid everyone’s jurisdiction, presumably to do some financial crimes there. turns out you can get away with this on earth, so it’s unnecessary

fullsquare@awful.systems on 03 May 07:22 collapse

at least this operation won’t leave behind any e-waste, since it all will burn down when orbit maintaining engines inevitably fail

cmnybo@discuss.tchncs.de on 03 May 07:27 next collapse

Keeping data centers cool is hard enough on earth. It would be completely impractical in space.

Midnitte@beehaw.org on 03 May 12:58 next collapse

Billionaires literally want the impossible

naeap@sopuli.xyz on 03 May 13:30 collapse

Yeah, was the first thing I thought, how the fuck do they want to cool them?

rirus@feddit.org on 03 May 08:39 next collapse

We don’t want more trash up there that can’t be repaired

KingThrillgore@lemmy.ml on 03 May 20:43 next collapse

You can’t disperse heat in a vacuum you fucking idiot

megopie@beehaw.org on 06 May 17:11 collapse

Ah yes because the cost savings on solar power in constant sunlight over nuclear reactors or solar with batteries definitely justifies the cost of launching hundreds of thousands of tons in to orbit, including the miles of radiators that will be needed to cool all this. Oh and definitely justifies the cost of having to hire astronauts as technicians to repair the thing when something goes wrong.

The numbers for these data centers don’t even work on fucking earth, how does increasing the set up cost by an order of magnitude make this work?