Profile: e32680a0...
We have a global freshwater crisis and it going to get much, much worse
What's the solution?
AI and more data say the tech visionaries and innovators
Doesn't AI consume vast quantities of water itself?
Globally, data centers are forecast to consume 450m gallons of water daily by 2030, up from ~205m in 2016, according to data reviewed by Bloomberg.
https://thehustle.co/big-tech-s-thirst-for-ai-dominance-may-bring-literal-thirst-for-everyone-else/
nostr:npub1xxemmfvctc02ug4ue2u8sr2z683wpprh3ntl5r5gc3cd7l3f02ass4zxth If we worked in the proper direction, and decided where we were, mapped the systems, and planned a route, we wouldn't like the answers. We need food, water, wet bulb temp, shelter, and basic medical care for all humans, without damaging the biosphere for other living organisms we share it with, and that we rely on. We can have all of that, but we certainly won't be tweeting about it as we live it. The answers are politically untenable, so we collapse. I do agree with the OP.
Normally data flow diagrams are 2D, and this makes sense; however, 3D can show outliers. More on this here: https://triple.pub/#section-65
#DataFlow #SystemDesign #ThreeJS #triples
The HTML, ECMAScript, and even #Pandoc and Lua fold together with Phil Harvey's #ExifTool. This particular hack is a filter that calculates the sizes of a #latex wrapfigure command, using a #deno backend running #LocalFirst that generates a 1.4MB single page HTML web app rendering of 1300 articles w/ included libraries as well as a PDF. Deno=ubiquitous compute: cloud upside down. (I can't keep #JoniMitchell from singing her song in my head, but it is true... I've seen both sides now.)


