Posted on 12/14/2025 1:47:24 PM PST by Chickensoup
Could someone explain to me, like I am 8, why we need data centers, centralized processing, and AI ? Why? Who decided?
Someone the other day said they wished it were less sycophantic; it does tend to be kind of a suck-up...
But WHT can’t we just continue to have our toys in our computers and have communication with other computers.
Central processing is a dumb idea.
There is that so-what quality.
So you are saying that concretely that it is apower grab.
I notice no judges objected to that Trump EO.
Sad
Big Brother doesn’t need AI to ‘watch you’. We’ve had the ‘No Such Agency’ doing that for decades.
(But since we’re already in that jungle, AI might contribute a great deal to national security.)
good post and great tagline
The average data center occupies about 40 acres of land. However, larger facilities, especially those designed for AI workloads, can require 200 acres or more. Malls typically take up 50-100 acres.
Not sure how we are being “pock marked.”
To Orwell... sadly.
As fakes like that become more and more sophisticated, AI will be able to examine them and tell us whether they’re real or not. It will be able to take them apart and see things we don’t and see them very quickly..
Again, our enemies ARE going to use it.
That is a very fair point! If we kept everything ourselves, nobody could take it away, right?
Here is the explanation for a 3-year-old (and why “central processing” isn’t always dumb, but why we do it anyway).
1. The “Tiny Backpack” Problem
Imagine you want to bring all your toys to the park. Every single LEGO, every stuffed animal, every car.
* The Problem: Your backpack is too small! If you try to stuff them all in, the backpack rips, and you fall over because it is too heavy.
* The Computer: Your iPad or laptop is the small backpack. It can hold some toys, but it cannot hold the whole world (like every video on YouTube).
* Why we need the Big Building: We leave the heavy toys in the big building (Data Center) so your backpack stays light and you can run fast.
2. The “Hot and Tired” Problem
Imagine I asked you to run as fast as you can while carrying a big rock and singing a song and doing a math problem.
* The Problem: You would get very hot, very sweaty, and you would need a nap in 30 seconds.
* The Computer: If your little phone tries to run a giant AI brain or a huge game all by itself, it gets super hot in your hand and the battery dies in two minutes.
* Why we need the Big Building: We let the Big Computer do the running and sweating. Your phone just watches. This keeps your phone cool and your battery full.
3. The “Playground Fight” Problem
Imagine you and your friends are playing a game of Tag, but there is no referee. You say “I tagged you!” and your friend says “No you didn’t!”
* The Problem: If itโs just you and your friend talking (computer to computer), who decides who won? You might fight or cheat.
* The Computer: If we just talk computer-to-computer, it is hard to agree on things (like who shot the bad guy in the game first).
* Why we need the Big Building: The Central Processor is the Referee. It watches everyone and says, “Nope, he tagged you first!” so the game is fair.
So, is it a dumb idea?
Sometimes, yes! You are smart to ask that.
* If the internet breaks: You can’t play with the toys in the big building. That is annoying!
* If the referee is mean: The people who own the big building can say “No more toys for you.” That is scary.
But... we chose this because we wanted our phones to be tiny, light, and cheap, but we still wanted them to do huge, magical things. We traded control for convenience.
Would you like me to explain how “Local-First” software is trying to fix this, so you can keep your toys again?
You.
You and everyone else will be buying products that cost less to deliver due to reduced labor costs.
From McDonalds to pick-up trucks.
There’s a robot machine near me that knows how to prune grape vines.
Well, I guess you should go to the library and do some research.
I am glad to hear you use DVDs from Goodwill. I feared you were still in the VHS era.
I am not going to explain AI to you. Go to Chat GPT and ask it some questions. It will give you a good sense of what it is.
Socialized risks for anticipated future private profits.
When these things go under it will be the utility rate-payers that will be left holding the bag.
Ball stadium economics.
Someone who profits from power and water usage.๐ค๐๐
Sure. But I typed in one line and got that back immediately. You can drive a nail with pressure alone; but, a hammer makes it easier.
There will be major changes coming.
There are plenty of good videos on YouTube that explain different forms of AI for non professionals;
I’ve watched about half of this, and it seems good for a very basic introduction:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=m8o2GrbR3d8&pp=ygUNZXhwbGFpbmluZyBhaQ%3D%3D
Ahem.
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