

I was not there, Gandalf. This was before even my time.
They have a lot less lead poisoning today than those kids from 20th century past, too.
“Frequently, I’ve come to regret things I’ve said. This, from 2001, is not one of those times.”
Sisko*
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Once again, Escadrone does not disappoint.
Or breathe around it. The gympie gympie gets its own separate, controlled environment to share with giant hogweed and friends.
Oh yeah, must have. Bonus points if their house plants are prickly or poisonous.
Big container of plain oats or the prepackaged units of various flavors?
And now we’ve read it. AGH, now I’ve said the word!
How many assholes we got on this plane?
Oh no, what’d they break this time?
Have you seen the Top Gear US South special where they drive from Miami to New Orleans? A bit old now, but still relevant.
Now you’re talkin!
At the deployment site, a remotely operated vehicle retrieved a cable containing the fiber optic and power wiring from the seafloor and brought it to the surface where it was checked and attached to the datacenter, and the datacenter powered on.
Sadly, it sounds like power is coming from the shore.
Underwater datacenters could also serve as anchor tenants for marine renewable energy such as offshore wind farms or banks of tidal turbines, allowing the two industries to evolve in lockstep.
But I think this is their plan for energy in the future.
Oh no doubt. It makes a great deal of sense.
I’m just curious what the actual heat output is (avg, min, max, in vs out), and what the environmental impact is.
Will there be biofouling because the warm seawater is desirable?
Will it even be viable offshore from places like Miami?
Can it produce too much heat for the local environment? Probably not one, but what about after this scale-up with renewables like the article mentions?
At what scale would it begin to disrupt things like the AMOC?