• bitofhope@awful.systems
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    1 day ago

    Data centers in space are a tool. You have to know when and how to use them. I’m not saying they’re completely useless, but most people do not understand how to avoid the difficult and expensive orbital logistics, power and cooling issues, radiation problems or the slow and complicated networking (unlike me, of course people like me know how to avoid them). Obviously it’s ludicrous to suggest space station server farms don’t have their uses and I’m not the kind of luddite saying nobody should ever be putting data centers in space, but right now they should really only be used together with terrestrial data centers and not relied on exclusively. That said, it’s still early days and we will inevitably be seeing a lot more compute in the orbit.

    • scruiser@awful.systems
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      6 hours ago

      My poe detection wasn’t sure until the last sentence used the “still early” and “inevitably” lines. Nice.

    • o7___o7@awful.systems
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      7 hours ago

      I get what you’re saying.

      I hate when they make us untangle these linguistic knots. I think this is a motte-and-bailey1 situation, like how the oppo respond to AI (LLM) criticism by implying we don’t like AI (ML i.e. the old thing that works).

      They likewise want datacenters (Big Hot Steaming Shitbox of GPUs…IN SPACE) not datacenters (radiation hardened, multiply-redundant, low-power industrial CPU clusters…IN SPACE)

      1 ugh sorry having a brain fart and cant think of a better term

      Edit: I am reliably informed that I let one go over my head. Apologies!

      In my defense, I would be entirely unsurprised if you turned out to be an expert in this stuff lol

      • bitofhope@awful.systems
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        8 hours ago

        I was just riffing on the AI “moderate” talking points. Building a data center in space is prima facie ludicrously stupid and you would need an extremely unusual justification to even consider it. I was pretending to act like a moron who blindly accepts there’s probably a serious reason why they make sense just because some dumbass hype man said so.

  • burble@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 day ago

    All the venture capitalists who got scammed into funding this:

    space is cold

    “Data centers on hard mode” is such a good way to put it.

  • BlueMonday1984@awful.systems
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    1 day ago

    Cooling in space is an absolute arse. Space is an excellent insulator for heat. That’s why a thermos works. In space, thermal management is job number one. All you can use is radiators. Getting rid of your 200 kilowatts will need about 500 square metres.

    To drive home how easy this is to work out, the Codex for the Mass Effect series1 explicitly points out that radiation is the only way to cool off in space, and goes into detail on how in-universe spaceships (civilian and military) deal with heat buildup.

    BioWare did their homework on this shit for a series of sci-fi RPGs which started in the early days of the Xbox 360 and the PS3. That the startup bros, tech co’s and billionaire CEOs pushing this have failed or refused to recognise this shit is goddamn negligence.

    So space is a bit hard. A lot of the sci-fi guys suggest oceans! We’ll put the data centres underwater and cooling will be great!

    The only way I see that idea working is if humanity works out underwater cities (e.g. Rapture from the original Bioshock) first. That’d make the issue of maintenance easier to deal with, even if getting new parts from the surface would remain a PITA.

    1 Specifically “Starships: Heat Management”, under Ships and Vehicles, in the Secondary Codex"

    • CinnasVerses@awful.systems
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      23 hours ago

      The tabletop game Attack Vector: Tactical from 2004 also models the need for radiators and risk of overheating.

      Science fiction from the 20th century tended to ignore cooling and cosmic rays (the one exception I can recall is Jerry Pournelle’s superscience Langston Field) and we know these guys are not up to date even on pop culture or good at reading.