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Bill Atkinson's Psychedelic User Interface

https://patternproject.substack.com/p/from-the-mac-to-the-mystical-bill
176•cainxinth•4h ago•76 comments

I'm Done with Social Media

https://www.carolinecrampton.com/im-done-with-social-media/
12•anarbadalov•14m ago•1 comments

Show HN: Vibe Kanban – Kanban board to manage your AI coding agents

https://github.com/BloopAI/vibe-kanban
10•louiskw•5m ago•1 comments

At Least 13 People Died by Suicide Amid U.K. Post Office Scandal, Report Says

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/10/world/europe/uk-post-office-scandal-report.html
260•xbryanx•3h ago•206 comments

AI Agent Benchmarks Are Broken

https://ddkang.substack.com/p/ai-agent-benchmarks-are-broken
84•neehao•2h ago•30 comments

Upgrading an M4 Pro Mac mini's storage for half the price

https://www.jeffgeerling.com/blog/2025/upgrading-m4-pro-mac-minis-storage-half-price
8•speckx•1h ago•0 comments

Overtourism in Japan, and how it hurts small businesses

https://craigmod.com/ridgeline/210/
66•speckx•2h ago•112 comments

Recovering from AI Addiction

https://internetaddictsanonymous.org/internet-and-technology-addiction/signs-of-an-addiction-to-ai/
163•pera•3h ago•136 comments

Show HN: Pangolin – Open source alternative to Cloudflare Tunnels

https://github.com/fosrl/pangolin
358•miloschwartz•17h ago•71 comments

OpenFront: Realtime Risk-like multiplayer game in the browser

https://openfront.io/
134•thombles•8h ago•35 comments

Postgres LISTEN/NOTIFY does not scale

https://www.recall.ai/blog/postgres-listen-notify-does-not-scale
508•davidgu•4d ago•233 comments

LLM Inference Handbook

https://bentoml.com/llm/
197•djhu9•12h ago•7 comments

FP8 is ~100 tflops faster when the kernel name has "cutlass" in it

https://twitter.com/cis_female/status/1943069934332055912
154•limoce•4h ago•65 comments

Things I learned from 5 years at Vercel

https://leerob.com/vercel
49•gk1•2h ago•10 comments

Batch Mode in the Gemini API: Process More for Less

https://developers.googleblog.com/en/scale-your-ai-workloads-batch-mode-gemini-api/
136•xnx•3d ago•47 comments

Apple vs the Law

https://formularsumo.co.uk/blog/2025/apple-vs-the-law/
302•tempodox•8h ago•270 comments

Some arguments against a land value tax (2024)

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/CCuJotfcaoXf8FYcy/some-arguments-against-a-land-value-tax
24•danny00•2h ago•20 comments

Show HN: Interactive pinout for the Raspberry Pi Pico 2

https://pico2.pinout.xyz
87•gadgetoid•3d ago•21 comments

The ChompSaw: A Benchtop Power Tool That's Safe for Kids to Use

https://www.core77.com/posts/137602/The-ChompSaw-A-Benchtop-Power-Tool-Thats-Safe-for-Kids-to-Use
232•surprisetalk•4d ago•147 comments

Btrfs Allocator Hints

https://lwn.net/ml/all/cover.1747070147.git.anand.jain@oracle.com/
34•forza_user•2d ago•12 comments

Show HN: Cactus – Ollama for Smartphones

https://github.com/cactus-compute/cactus
195•HenryNdubuaku•19h ago•68 comments

What is Realtalk’s relationship to AI? (2024)

https://dynamicland.org/2024/FAQ/#What_is_Realtalks_relationship_to_AI
267•prathyvsh•23h ago•84 comments

Underwater turbine spinning for 6 years off Scotland's coast is a breakthrough

https://apnews.com/article/tidal-energy-turbine-marine-meygen-scotland-ffff3a7082205b33b612a1417e1ec6d6
226•djoldman•1d ago•201 comments

FOKS: Federated Open Key Service

https://foks.pub/
266•ubj•1d ago•64 comments

Flix – A powerful effect-oriented programming language

https://flix.dev/
310•freilanzer•1d ago•154 comments

Series of posts on HTTP status codes (2018)

https://evertpot.com/http/
63•antonalekseev•2d ago•10 comments

Graphical Linear Algebra

https://graphicallinearalgebra.net/
281•hyperbrainer•23h ago•23 comments

Red Hat Technical Writing Style Guide

https://stylepedia.net/style/
248•jumpocelot•1d ago•132 comments

At Amazon's biggest data center, everything is supersized for AI

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/24/technology/amazon-ai-data-centers.html
66•pseudolus•5h ago•57 comments

Grok: Searching X for "From:Elonmusk (Israel or Palestine or Hamas or Gaza)"

https://simonwillison.net/2025/Jul/11/grok-musk/
578•simonw•14h ago•422 comments
Open in hackernews

At Amazon's biggest data center, everything is supersized for AI

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/24/technology/amazon-ai-data-centers.html
66•pseudolus•5h ago

Comments

pseudolus•5h ago
https://archive.ph/9ytmy
2OEH8eoCRo0•3h ago
> After building seven data centers in Indiana, Amazon plans to build 23 more.

Jesus

v5v3•3h ago
Large numbers of the 8 billion people in the world are still not digitally literate.

The demand from all the poorer countries with large populations is only going to go up as their kids grow up with tech.

altcognito•2h ago
I'd imagine they would build those data centers closer to those populations.
dude250711•3h ago
Once the overall AI bubble bursts/deflates, would they be able to re-purpose it for other workloads e.g. cloud gaming?

Though, maybe Midjourney or other niche AI companies could buy it for the right price I guess.

progbits•3h ago
The server/ML GPUs are not great for gaming, they strip out all the specialized shader/pixel units to cram in more general compute cores.

In theory you could write games with just those but aside from the amount of work needed I'm not sure if the performance would be good enough, the specialized texture samplers etc can be faster than general purpose compute shaders.

Also, for cloud gaming you want very low latency, so few GPUs all over the world in local POPs, not a lot of GPUs in few large data centers.

tyingq•3h ago
"Trainium accelerator" doesn't sound like it would be terribly useful outside it's current niche. It's not clear how much of the spend is that kind of thing versus general purpose compute and storage.
closewith•3h ago
This feels like saying when the dot-com bubble burst, could the servers be re-purposed as mainframes. Whatever about valuations and individual stocks, AI/LLM workloads are only going up.
DrBazza•3h ago
> is the first in a new generation of data centers being built by Amazon, and part of what the company calls Project Rainier, after the mountain that looms near its Seattle headquarters

Near both the Casadia fault that's produced magnitude 9 earthquakes and a chain of active volcanoes. Both of which are statistically likely. I do wonder what contingency plans Amazon (and Microsoft) have in the event of a megathrust earthquake.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cascadia_subduction_zone#Forec...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Rainier#Modern_activity_...

readthenotes1•3h ago
It is named project rainier, but the facilities are in Indiana.

If you're speaking metaphorically, the mega thrust would be some cataclysmic world event like China invading Taiwan. In which case they won't need to earn natural gas to power or waste fresh water to cool...

jltsiren•1h ago
Megathrust earthquakes are pretty common around the world. Some of them cause major damage, such as the ones in 2004 and 2011. But even then, the impact is mostly regional.
PNewling•1h ago
> Both of which are statistically likely.

It's seems a little dishonest to not include that 'statistically likely' is on a geological time scale.

progbits•3h ago
> The local utility will largely use natural gas to generate the additional electricity needed to power Amazon’s data center

Sad, but expected.

sigmoid10•3h ago
At this point we have to be glad it's not coal. After all we have a president that just passed an executive order to foster the "Beautiful Clean Coal Industry"
blibble•1h ago
> At this point we have to be glad it's not coal.

it will be if the coal price drops far enough

gadders•2h ago
It's either that or nuclear.
bflesch•1h ago
False equivalence bias
gadders•1h ago
Dunning–Kruger effect
progbits•1h ago
You say that as if nuclear was bad?
gadders•1h ago
Not at all. I think it's probably the best option if you want guaranteed electricity.
lordswork•2h ago
Far better than xAI's data center being powered by mobile Diesel generators
perihelions•1h ago
xAI is natural gas, not diesel.
polski-g•2h ago
Decades of lies about nuclear has its downsides.
thegreatpeter•1h ago
For something to be considered "sad", there needs to be an available, practical alternative. What should they have chosen instead?
joelthelion•1h ago
We could not build new data centers and focus on fixing the real issues instead.

We could always revisit this decision once clean power is actually available.

TOGoS•3m ago
Cover the roof in solar panels and use the power to do something useful instead of running bullshit generators.

Or maybe a park with some oak trees and a frisbee golf course idk.

yahoozoo•3h ago
> The facility will consume 2.2 gigawatts of electricity — enough to power a million homes. Each year, it will use millions of gallons of water to keep the chips from overheating. And it was built with a single customer in mind: the A.I. start-up Anthropic, which aims to create an A.I. system that matches the human brain.

Sentences like this never ceases to amaze me. All of this juice to attempt to match what a single human brain can do with its relatively low resource requirements.

mc32•3h ago
I think you’re conflating things. It’s not a single human brain. It’s processing power to provide the human trove of knowledge and reasoning at the beck and call of millions of people nearly simultaneously. No single person would be able to do that.
threetonesun•3h ago
No, but we had done a pretty good job of storing and indexing it all on this thing called the Internet.
matt123456789•2h ago
And for the same purpose before that we had, or rather have, since it is still very much in use today, the Dewey Decimal System. Peering further onward still into the annals of library science, one can find even more creative and revealing methods of indexing human knowledge. In doing so, one might even be inclined to believe that the state of the science has come so far as to be considered solved. Alas.
threetonesun•1h ago
I think if you went to the library and asked for information on "how to build a chicken coop" and the librarian took 60 books related to chickens and building and farming, cut up the words in them, then arranged them in a way they found satisfying, you might start going to a different library.
blibble•1h ago
> It’s processing power to provide produce near unlimited spam and millions of pictures of shrimp jesus

ftfy

tartoran•2m ago
It's a laudable goal to match human intelligence but we can't ignore the cost for too long. If humans can create the same reasoning for cheaper why would we chug along on this path? And this may be the case when the AI hype bubble pops and real economics take over.
h1fra•2h ago
I thought datacenter water cooling was usually a closed loop? I keep reading conflicting info about this
2OEH8eoCRo0•2h ago
Nope. Evaporative cooling.
sleepydog•2h ago
For very hot data centers, evaporative cooling is still popular. This is from 2012 but I doubt much has changed.

https://blog.google/outreach-initiatives/sustainability/gett...

aitchnyu•2h ago
Are new water-guzzling DCs and nuclear plants built on water sources unlikely to be affected by climate change?
placardloop•1h ago
13 years is an incredibly long time for something as fast moving as data center development. I guarantee that a _lot_ has changed. I know AWS in particular has gone through multiple entire revisions of their DC designs, and I recall a talk from some of their engineers saying how AWS actually found it more economical to use less cooling and let their DCs run hotter than they used to.

Here’s a recent article from AWS about using closed-loop systems for their AI data centers: https://www.aboutamazon.com/news/aws/aws-liquid-cooling-data...

2OEH8eoCRo0•1h ago
Data centers may change but the physics of cooling doesn't.

It's more economical to run chips hotter but at the end of the day you'll still have heat that needs dissipating and it's hard if not impossible to beat evaporative cooling in terms of cost.

placardloop•56m ago
This is like someone in 1800 saying “at the end of the day you still have transportation needs and it’s hard if not impossible to beat horses and carriages in terms of cost”.

Literally just do a google search. There are advancements every day that improve upon evaporative cooling to make it use less and less water and energy, and alternative methods other than evaporative cooling.

butlike•22m ago
Bleeding-edge advancement and commercially-viable solutions are not apples to apples.
jandrewrogers•15m ago
> Each year, it will use millions of gallons of water to keep the chips from overheating.

Growing corn on that same 1200 acres would require on the order of a billion gallons of water. People have no sense of just how much water agriculture consumes.

In all probability, putting a data center on farm land is greatly reducing water consumption.

raldi•11m ago
Doesn’t a typical McDonald’s require millions of gallons of water each week just for the beef alone, without even considering things like drinks and ice and boiling potatoes and washing floors?
v5v3•3h ago
>A year ago, a 1,200-acre stretch of farmland outside New Carlisle, Ind., was an empty cornfield. Now, seven Amazon data centers rise up from the rich soil, each larger than a football stadium.

Can't they find brownfield sites instead of fields

micromacrofoot•3h ago
it's probably not actually rich soil, maybe a writer's flourish - post harvest fields are pretty much barren of nutrients and life
maxerickson•3h ago
The county it is located in is about 290,000 acres.

Indiana is about 23 million acres.

lordswork•2h ago
This comment got me wondering whether loss of farmland in the US is a serious issue.

It looks like there's about 800 million acres of farmland in the US and we're losing about 2 million acres per year to the land being repurposed. Despite that, crop production has more than tripled in the past 70 years due to technological advances.

That said, economic effects, loss of farmland, and climate change have contributed to slower growth and higher variability of crop yields recently.

In the past decade there's been a modest 0.8% annual increase in crop production despite losing about 2 million acres per year.

TheNewsIsHere•2h ago
One of the major problems facing American agriculture is that there are fewer and fewer farmers/farming families.

Farming is extremely money and labor intensive and there’s a lot of upfront investment with a lot of long-tail return, and it’s not “sexy” the way (for example) AI is, so there’s not a bottomless pit of cash to shovel into the furnace for a quick buck turnaround.

Independent farmers tend to seriously rely on good weather and a lot of advantageous tax treatment.

Of course massive agri-business would very much love to continue to fill more and more of the void left by the shrinking independent farming population. That has its own problems.

antisthenes•1h ago
It will swing back one day. Maybe in a few generations.
clvx•2h ago
The problem is not the amount of land but if that land is economically viable. Farm already has low margins.so, if you grab a good location to build a data center and push the farm land even further away from population centers, then you are pretty much killing family farms.
kasey_junk•1h ago
There are virtually no family farms left in the US. Especially central Indiana corn farmers. 1200 acres wouldn’t be a financially viable corn farm if it were family farmed.
nhecker•3m ago
I think this is really close. My hunch is that agricultural land is just simply cheaper to acquire and convert, as compared to industrial land which may or may not have all kinds of remediation or razing that needs to happen to it first.
aaronbaugher•1h ago
Yeah, it's not a significant amount of land. But it does seem like these companies prefer to take quality farmland instead of unused land. There's something similar happening near my town, where a company wants to put a big solar array on some prime farmland, and the locals are asking why that spot and not getting an answer. It might save a small amount on development, as farmland is fairly flat and has no trees to remove, but that's miniscule in the overall budget for these things, and rough ground would be much cheaper to buy. But the corporation behind it and the government entities involved are digging in their heels and insisting on using farmland, without any explanation why.

So it does seem like some of the people making these decisions just like the idea of taking farmland out of production for some reason. Maybe they just don't like farmers or modern farming methods. If that's their motive, they may not realize how tiny an effect they're having on the total, because most non-farmers don't really understand how much land is out there.

It's like the people who say Bill Gates is trying to control the food supply because he owns something like 270,000 acres of farmland. Even that just isn't that much, not enough for him to control anything larger than the horseradish market.

perihelions•1h ago
> "Can't they find brownfield sites instead of fields"

You mean precisely like xAI did in Memphis? Build on the site of an abandoned factory—a historically disadvantaged, low-income industrial zone?

I couldn't imagine anyone having anything negative to say about that.

j-bos•1h ago
I don't know about Indiana, but in Texas companies buy farmland because it's often available near population centers and infrastructure. And the land is available because the existing owners do just enough farming/ranching to qualify for the lower tax category.
placardloop•1h ago
This particular site is being built basically in the parking lot/backyard of a steel mill, so it sort of is brownfield. I have a hunch that “empty cornfield” is just the author using some artistic freedom instead of saying “an empty field in the Midwest”.
allturtles•56m ago
It was definitely farm fields growing crops, you can look in Google Earth and see for yourself.

Edit: Anywhere in the Midwest where there is a large expanse of flat ground will almost always be growing crops or have a town built on it. Undeveloped land is almost all hilly and forested or floodplain, nowhere where you could put a data center.