Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Notice there aren't many on the Maryland side. One fo the reasons is zoning.
Datacenters aren't all bad. They provide very high-paying jobs (IT engineers) and they need people 24/7 so it's steady work. But, it only takes a few to man a datacenter with the footprint of a small shopping mall.
I don't think they hire that many people. I've always heard everything mostly runs itself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Notice there aren't many on the Maryland side. One fo the reasons is zoning.
Datacenters aren't all bad. They provide very high-paying jobs (IT engineers) and they need people 24/7 so it's steady work. But, it only takes a few to man a datacenter with the footprint of a small shopping mall.
Maryland doesn’t have the electricity for data centers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Notice there aren't many on the Maryland side. One fo the reasons is zoning.
Datacenters aren't all bad. They provide very high-paying jobs (IT engineers) and they need people 24/7 so it's steady work. But, it only takes a few to man a datacenter with the footprint of a small shopping mall.
Maryland doesn’t have the electricity for data centers.
That's great news! I hope that means those horrific things will never be coming to MD.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In 30 years, these things will be today’s malls. Rotting, abandoned, desolate as small and more efficient technology eats their lunch.
I’m actually doubtful if that this will happen for multiple reasons.
1) We are approaching fundamental limits of Moores law. IBM is already making transistors that are only five atoms in size and you can’t have a transistor that is smaller than one atom.
2) Demand for processing power and data storage is very elastic. When it becomes cheaper people use significantly more of it.
3) AI is supercharging demand for processing power and data storage. The most promising uses for AI are extremely computationally intensive. Eg. genomic analysis and risk prediction for diseases.
Unfortunately, demand for data center space will continue to increase exponentially for the foreseeable future.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Notice there aren't many on the Maryland side. One fo the reasons is zoning.
Datacenters aren't all bad. They provide very high-paying jobs (IT engineers) and they need people 24/7 so it's steady work. But, it only takes a few to man a datacenter with the footprint of a small shopping mall.
Maryland doesn’t have the electricity for data centers.
Anonymous wrote:Data centers are good neighbors, as long as you're not close enough to hear any noise generated. They require relatively few people to operate, so fewer cars on the road commuting to and from them. They pay taxes but consume virtually nothing in the way of public services, so a net positive for gov't budgets. And they support the provision of tech capabilities we all want, which can't be provided from outer space.
Anonymous wrote:Notice there aren't many on the Maryland side. One fo the reasons is zoning.
Datacenters aren't all bad. They provide very high-paying jobs (IT engineers) and they need people 24/7 so it's steady work. But, it only takes a few to man a datacenter with the footprint of a small shopping mall.
Anonymous wrote:Data centers are good neighbors, as long as you're not close enough to hear any noise generated. They require relatively few people to operate, so fewer cars on the road commuting to and from them. They pay taxes but consume virtually nothing in the way of public services, so a net positive for gov't budgets. And they support the provision of tech capabilities we all want, which can't be provided from outer space.
Anonymous wrote:In 30 years, these things will be today’s malls. Rotting, abandoned, desolate as small and more efficient technology eats their lunch.
Anonymous wrote:I specifically avoid using AI to make the data centers in NoVa get eventually shut down. Doing my part
Anonymous wrote:There is no nova without data centers.
Anonymous wrote:Notice there aren't many on the Maryland side. One fo the reasons is zoning.
Datacenters aren't all bad. They provide very high-paying jobs (IT engineers) and they need people 24/7 so it's steady work. But, it only takes a few to man a datacenter with the footprint of a small shopping mall.