Big Tech puts the dreams of putting data centers in space
From one thing, systems he thinks imagine relatively slow process data compared to those in Terra Firma. They are constantly bombed by radiation, and “obsolete will be a problem” because it will be very difficult to repair or updates. Hajimiri believes that space data centers can be a good solution someday, but they do not hesitate to say what day may happen. “It will definitely be done in a few years,” he said. “The question is how effective they are and how affordable they are.”
The idea of putting data centers in orbit is not limited to the illegal movements of techniques or deeper thoughts of academics. Even some of the elected officials in cities where companies like Amazon hope to build data centers are raising this. Tucson, Arizona, a Nikki Lee Council adviser on his potential at the August trial, in which the council unanimously voted for a proposed data center in his city, puts poetry about his potential.
“Many people say data centers do not belong to the desert,” Lee said. But “if this is really a national priority”, it must be focused on “putting federal research and development dollars in search of data centers that will exist in space.
This is true, but it happens on a experimental scale, not an industrial. A startup named StarCloud hoped to launch a few NVIDIA chips in August as the refrigerator, but the launch date was pushed back. A few months ago, Lonestar data systems with a miniature data center carrier such as Imagine Dragons, on the moon, although Landar used it and died in the effort. Such more throws are scheduled for the coming months. “Forecasting this idea will be very fast,” Matthew Winsierl, an economist at Harvard University, who studies market forces in space. “Space -based data centers may have some niche programs such as space -based data processing and national security capabilities,” he said. “To make a meaningful competitor to ground centers, they have to compete like anything else about the cost and quality of service.”
Currently, putting a data center in space is much more expensive than putting one of them in the Virginia Data Central Valley, where electricity demand can double in the next decade. And as long as it is cheaper on the ground, profit -motivated companies support the expansion of ground ground data.
However, there is a factor that may encourage Openai and others to follow the heavens: there are not many rules there. Building data centers need municipal permits, and companies can increase their water bills, or heat their planets by local governments whose residents are concerned that data center development may increase their water. “In space, there is no neighbor to complain,” said Michel Hanlon, a political scientist and lawyer who leads the Air and Space Law Center at the University of Mississippi. “If you are an American company looking to put data centers in space, the sooner the congressional like,” Oh, we have to adjust it. “