Comment by titzer

Comment by titzer 4 days ago

6 replies

In addition to the ludicrous unworkable physics, as it turns out, datacenters need people servicing things all the time. Even if you could get those measly three racks into space, they'd function about a month before some harddisks were failing, network switches were down, some crap breaks in the cooling system, power system short, breakers trip, etc, and on and on.

So obviously we're not going to be some SREs into space to babysit the machines. Have everything fail in place? Have robots do it? What about the regular supply missions to keep replacing all the failing hardware (there's only so many spare HDDs you can have on hand).

The whole thing is farcical.

fragmede 4 days ago

> So obviously we're not going to be some SREs into space to babysit the machines.

Shut up! This is the chance for one of us to go into space! I don't care if all I'm doing is swapping 1U pizza boxes in the cold hard vacuum of space, I'm down!

  • jasomill 3 days ago

    As long as the rotations aren't for more than a month or two, sign me up as well!

hedora 4 days ago

Nah; let it fail in place.

See also: Any on-prem horror show that budgeted for capex, rent, cooling, network and power, but not maintenance.

mbac32768 4 days ago

Yes. Anyone who thinks you can ship a datacenter to space and save has never managed a datacenter.

mc32 4 days ago

Plus, in space, their electronic components would experience much more radiation (and the effects on components). They could build with rad-hardened components but those are both more expensive and several generations older than SOTA found in the habitable zone.