• olivierestsage 21 hours ago

    Been amazing to see how far tech companies have fallen in public esteem (good). I remember when my friends and I would get together to watch the new MacBook announcements, eager to see what was coming. Feels as distant now as sk8erboi culture.

    • atonse 19 hours ago

      Doesn’t help that they’ve gotten so big. They’ve become “the man” the establishment that has a direct line to everyone’s brains.

      And have in so many cases abused their power.

      All that not counting the stagnation and enshittification.

      I also used to get together with friends to watch Apple Keynotes. They were so much fun.

      But now they’re just extremely sanitized pre produced videos (basically ads) that lack any sort of soul.

      Yes yes I know they were always mainly ads. But there was something to be said for people presenting on stage.

      • dangus 18 hours ago

        Back in the day, these companies stayed in their lane, so to speak.

        When you bought a computer, that’s all it was. It had much more of a toy or appliance like appeal rather than this deeply integrated life augmenter. The idea that a company like Apple or even a bigger (at the time) company like Microsoft would own a movie/TV studio and broadcast major league sports was an insane idea.

        I will say regarding keynotes, it wasn’t limited to the genuine nature of the companies. The 90s and 2000s were just on different levels of the pace of technology development. I am sure that even Microsoft had an exciting keynote or two and they were the evil empire in those days.

      • PearlRiver 16 hours ago

        I mean what do these data centers provide for the locals? They are big ugly boxes were nobody actually works. All the money goes to faceless mega corporations.

        At least with a nuclear power plant you can have the patriotic pride of doing something for the nation.

      • exabrial a day ago

        I think the one benefit people are overlooking is that there is an opportunity to increase power generation.

        Rather than saying "no", how about making the new datacenters fund nuclear, solar, and grid battery?

        • subscribed 19 hours ago

          New datacenters aren't harmless (noise or NoX pollution is real), and they'll consume more than they generate.

          Yours better off mandating solar panels on parking lots (especially in the US!), etc.

          • AngryData 12 hours ago

            I mean there are a number of places where datacenters have been built and claim to be putting 100% of the money forward to power their data centers with plants and infrastructure, however with everyone around those areas still claiming to be paying more for power afterwards.

            • blibble a day ago

              > how about making the new datacenters fund nuclear, solar, and grid battery?

              good luck with that

              any promises will be ignored, avoided or dumped onto regular people the very moment the approval is granted

              • icwtyjj a day ago

                What about a making it prerequisite? Demonstrate you have built the nuclear/solar/whatever capacity to cover your own energy before you're allowed to build a datacenter?

                • Manuel_D 13 hours ago

                  Solar doesn't work well with 24/7 demand requirements, provisioning enough storage to fully even out intermittency drastically raises costs (most battery storage systems are for only 2-4 hours).

                  Nuclear has extremely onerous regulatory requirements.

                  • _aavaa_ a day ago

                    > nuclear

                    See you in 15 years I guess.

                    Many site are already building their own capacity, but doing it (unfortunately) with gas turbines.

                    • blibble a day ago

                      if it's connected to the grid and you make them buy capacity, they will write a contract to sell the same amount of capacity the moment it's approved

                      and you've accomplished nothing

                      and if you make them hold a certain position they'll simply sell in another subsidiary, or use derivatives

                      the only way to deal with this type of parasitism is blanket refusal

                      • dangus 18 hours ago

                        I think this is the wrong way to go.

                        Let them buy energy, but why aren’t utilities’ power rates more strictly regulated?

                        Residential rates should be locked in with inflation, allow business rates to increase.

                        • oliwarner 9 hours ago

                          But you've just killed domestic manufacturing and any retail balancing on fine margins.

                          The only way to remove additional grid demand (and therefore cost) is to simultaneously flood the supply. The DCs should absolutely pay for that.

                      • gruez a day ago

                        >any promises will be ignored, avoided or dumped onto regular people the very moment the approval is granted

                        Doesn't seem too hard to force the datacenter to put up a bond for it, and then if the requirements/timelines aren't met the bond's seized.

                        • blibble a day ago

                          it's exceptionally hard because energy is fungible

                          try writing the contract, say, requiring 500MW of new gas generation to be built locally to power the DC, which is grid connected

                          they'll then secretly write a contract to sell 500MW of gas generation on the open market, conditional on approval

                          at some price they'll find a buyer, at which point 500MW increase in grid capacity has been cancelled out despite them actually building the plant

                          and all it cost them was the difference in the contract price

                          • scrubs 16 hours ago

                            Hmm not quite following: 500MW was created at connected to grid as required although delegated to 3rd party. And the DC uses that power. So what's the problem?

                            • blibble 6 hours ago

                              500MW doesn't get built on the other side of the country when needed as the power has been sold

                              so there's a lag, but at this kind of scale you don't really care

                            • undefined 19 hours ago
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