The Download: the desert data center boom, and how to measure Earth’s elevations
This is today's edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the world of technology. The data center boom in the desert In the high desert east of Reno, Nevada, construction crews are flattening the golden foothills of the Virginia Range, laying the foundations of a data center city. Google, Tract, Switch, EdgeCore, Novva, Vantage, and PowerHouse are all operating, building, or expanding huge facilities nearby. Meanwhile, Microsoft has acquired more than 225 acres of undeveloped property, and Apple is expanding its existing data center just across the Truckee River from the industrial park.The corporate race to amass computing resources to train and run artificial intelligence models and store information in the cloud has sparked a data center boom in the desert—and it’s just far enough away from Nevada’s communities to elude wide notice and, some fear, adequate scrutiny. Read the full story.
—James Temple This story is part of Power Hungry: AI and our energy future—our new series shining a light on the energy demands and carbon costs of the artificial intelligence revolution. Check out the rest of the package here.
A new atomic clock in space could help us measure elevations on Earth In 2003, engineers from Germany and Switzerland began building a bridge across the Rhine River simultaneously from both sides. Months into construction, they found that the two sides did not meet. The German side hovered 54 centimeters above the Swiss one. The misalignment happened because they measured elevation from sea level differently. To prevent such costly construction errors, in 2015 scientists in the International Association of Geodesy voted to adopt the International Height Reference Frame, or IHRF, a worldwide standard for elevation. Now, a decade after its adoption, scientists are looking to update the standard—by using the most precise clock ever to fly in space. Read the full story. —Sophia Chen Three takeaways about AI’s energy use and climate impacts —Casey Crownhart This week, we published Power Hungry, a package all about AI and energy. At the center of this package is the most comprehensive look yet at AI’s growing power demand, if I do say so myself.
This data-heavy story is the result of over six months of reporting by me and my colleague James O’Donnell. Over that time, with the help of leading researchers, we quantified the energy and emissions impacts of individual queries to AI models and tallied what it all adds up to, both right now and for the years ahead. There’s a lot of data to dig through, and I hope you’ll take the time to explore the whole story. But in the meantime, here are three of my biggest takeaways from working on this project. Read the full story.This article is from The Spark, MIT Technology Review’s weekly climate newsletter. To receive it in your inbox every Wednesday, sign up here. MIT Technology Review Narrated: Congress used to evaluate emerging technologies. Let’s do it again. Artificial intelligence comes with a shimmer and a sheen of magical thinking. And if we’re not careful, politicians, employers, and other decision-makers may accept at face value the idea that machines can and should replace human judgment and discretion. One way to combat that might be resurrecting the Office of Technology Assessment, a Congressional think tank that detected lies and tested tech until it was shuttered in 1995. This is our latest story to be turned into a MIT Technology Review Narrated podcast, which we’re publishing each week on Spotify and Apple Podcasts. Just navigate to MIT Technology Review Narrated on either platform, and follow us to get all our new content as it’s released.
The must-reads I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology.
1 OpenAI is buying Jony Ive’s AI startup The former Apple design guru will work with Sam Altman to design an entirely new range of devices.+ The deal is worth a whopping billion.+ Altman gave OpenAI staff a preview of its AI ‘companion’ devices.+ AI products to date have failed to set the world alight.2 Microsoft has blocked employee emails containing ‘Gaza’ or ‘Palestine’ Although the term ‘Israel’ does not trigger such a block.+ Protest group No Azure for Apartheid has accused the company of censorship.3 DOGE needs to do its work in secret That’s what the Trump administration is claiming to the Supreme Court, at least.+ It’s trying to avoid being forced to hand over internal documents.+ DOGE’s tech takeover threatens the safety and stability of our critical data.4 US banks are racing to embrace cryptocurrency Ahead of new stablecoin legislation.+ Attendees at Trump’s crypto dinner paid over million for the privilege.+ Bitcoin has surged to an all-time peak yet again.5 China is making huge technological leaps Thanks to the billions it’s poured into narrowing the gap between it and the US.+ Nvidia’s CEO has branded America’s chip curbs on China ‘a failure.’+ There can be no winners in a US-China AI arms race.6 Disordered eating content is rife on TikTokBut a pocket of creators are dedicated to debunking the worst of it.7 The US military is interested in the world’s largest aircraftThe gigantic WindRunner plane will have an 80-metre wingspan.+ Phase two of military AI has arrived.8 How AI is shaking up animationNew tools are slashing the costs of creating episodes by up to 90%.+ Generative AI is reshaping South Korea’s webcomics industry.9 Tesla’s Cybertruck is a flop Sorry, Elon.+ The vehicles’ resale value is plummeting.10 Google’s new AI video generator loves this terrible joke Which appears to originate from a Reddit post.+ What happened when 20 comedians got AI to write their routines.Quote of the day “It feels like we are marching off a cliff.” —An unnamed software engineering vice president jokes that future developers conferences will be attended by the AI agents companies like Microsoft are racing to deploy, Semafor reports. One more thing What does GPT-3 “know” about me?One of the biggest stories in tech is the rise of large language models that produce text that reads like a human might have written it. These models’ power comes from being trained on troves of publicly available human-created text hoovered up from the internet. If you’ve posted anything even remotely personal in English on the internet, chances are your data might be part of some of the world’s most popular LLMs.Melissa Heikkilä, MIT Technology Review’s former AI reporter, wondered what data these models might have on her—and how it could be misused. So she put OpenAI’s GPT-3 to the test. Read about what she found.We can still have nice things A place for comfort, fun and distraction to brighten up your day.+ Don’t shoot the messenger, but it seems like there’s a new pizza king in town + Ranked: every Final Destination film, from worst to best.+ Who knew that jelly could help to preserve coral reefs? Not I.+ A new generation of space archaeologists are beavering away to document our journeys to the stars.
#download #desert #data #center #boom
The Download: the desert data center boom, and how to measure Earth’s elevations
This is today's edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the world of technology. The data center boom in the desert In the high desert east of Reno, Nevada, construction crews are flattening the golden foothills of the Virginia Range, laying the foundations of a data center city. Google, Tract, Switch, EdgeCore, Novva, Vantage, and PowerHouse are all operating, building, or expanding huge facilities nearby. Meanwhile, Microsoft has acquired more than 225 acres of undeveloped property, and Apple is expanding its existing data center just across the Truckee River from the industrial park.The corporate race to amass computing resources to train and run artificial intelligence models and store information in the cloud has sparked a data center boom in the desert—and it’s just far enough away from Nevada’s communities to elude wide notice and, some fear, adequate scrutiny. Read the full story.
—James Temple This story is part of Power Hungry: AI and our energy future—our new series shining a light on the energy demands and carbon costs of the artificial intelligence revolution. Check out the rest of the package here.
A new atomic clock in space could help us measure elevations on Earth In 2003, engineers from Germany and Switzerland began building a bridge across the Rhine River simultaneously from both sides. Months into construction, they found that the two sides did not meet. The German side hovered 54 centimeters above the Swiss one. The misalignment happened because they measured elevation from sea level differently. To prevent such costly construction errors, in 2015 scientists in the International Association of Geodesy voted to adopt the International Height Reference Frame, or IHRF, a worldwide standard for elevation. Now, a decade after its adoption, scientists are looking to update the standard—by using the most precise clock ever to fly in space. Read the full story. —Sophia Chen Three takeaways about AI’s energy use and climate impacts —Casey Crownhart This week, we published Power Hungry, a package all about AI and energy. At the center of this package is the most comprehensive look yet at AI’s growing power demand, if I do say so myself.
This data-heavy story is the result of over six months of reporting by me and my colleague James O’Donnell. Over that time, with the help of leading researchers, we quantified the energy and emissions impacts of individual queries to AI models and tallied what it all adds up to, both right now and for the years ahead. There’s a lot of data to dig through, and I hope you’ll take the time to explore the whole story. But in the meantime, here are three of my biggest takeaways from working on this project. Read the full story.This article is from The Spark, MIT Technology Review’s weekly climate newsletter. To receive it in your inbox every Wednesday, sign up here. MIT Technology Review Narrated: Congress used to evaluate emerging technologies. Let’s do it again. Artificial intelligence comes with a shimmer and a sheen of magical thinking. And if we’re not careful, politicians, employers, and other decision-makers may accept at face value the idea that machines can and should replace human judgment and discretion. One way to combat that might be resurrecting the Office of Technology Assessment, a Congressional think tank that detected lies and tested tech until it was shuttered in 1995. This is our latest story to be turned into a MIT Technology Review Narrated podcast, which we’re publishing each week on Spotify and Apple Podcasts. Just navigate to MIT Technology Review Narrated on either platform, and follow us to get all our new content as it’s released.
The must-reads I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology.
1 OpenAI is buying Jony Ive’s AI startup The former Apple design guru will work with Sam Altman to design an entirely new range of devices.+ The deal is worth a whopping billion.+ Altman gave OpenAI staff a preview of its AI ‘companion’ devices.+ AI products to date have failed to set the world alight.2 Microsoft has blocked employee emails containing ‘Gaza’ or ‘Palestine’ Although the term ‘Israel’ does not trigger such a block.+ Protest group No Azure for Apartheid has accused the company of censorship.3 DOGE needs to do its work in secret That’s what the Trump administration is claiming to the Supreme Court, at least.+ It’s trying to avoid being forced to hand over internal documents.+ DOGE’s tech takeover threatens the safety and stability of our critical data.4 US banks are racing to embrace cryptocurrency Ahead of new stablecoin legislation.+ Attendees at Trump’s crypto dinner paid over million for the privilege.+ Bitcoin has surged to an all-time peak yet again.5 China is making huge technological leaps Thanks to the billions it’s poured into narrowing the gap between it and the US.+ Nvidia’s CEO has branded America’s chip curbs on China ‘a failure.’+ There can be no winners in a US-China AI arms race.6 Disordered eating content is rife on TikTokBut a pocket of creators are dedicated to debunking the worst of it.7 The US military is interested in the world’s largest aircraftThe gigantic WindRunner plane will have an 80-metre wingspan.+ Phase two of military AI has arrived.8 How AI is shaking up animationNew tools are slashing the costs of creating episodes by up to 90%.+ Generative AI is reshaping South Korea’s webcomics industry.9 Tesla’s Cybertruck is a flop Sorry, Elon.+ The vehicles’ resale value is plummeting.10 Google’s new AI video generator loves this terrible joke Which appears to originate from a Reddit post.+ What happened when 20 comedians got AI to write their routines.Quote of the day “It feels like we are marching off a cliff.” —An unnamed software engineering vice president jokes that future developers conferences will be attended by the AI agents companies like Microsoft are racing to deploy, Semafor reports. One more thing What does GPT-3 “know” about me?One of the biggest stories in tech is the rise of large language models that produce text that reads like a human might have written it. These models’ power comes from being trained on troves of publicly available human-created text hoovered up from the internet. If you’ve posted anything even remotely personal in English on the internet, chances are your data might be part of some of the world’s most popular LLMs.Melissa Heikkilä, MIT Technology Review’s former AI reporter, wondered what data these models might have on her—and how it could be misused. So she put OpenAI’s GPT-3 to the test. Read about what she found.We can still have nice things A place for comfort, fun and distraction to brighten up your day.+ Don’t shoot the messenger, but it seems like there’s a new pizza king in town 🍕+ Ranked: every Final Destination film, from worst to best.+ Who knew that jelly could help to preserve coral reefs? Not I.+ A new generation of space archaeologists are beavering away to document our journeys to the stars.
#download #desert #data #center #boom
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