Artificial Intelligence

bobpbx

Piney
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I wonder if it can cool the systems using salt water? Highly corrosive but only costs the power to pump it. Let me ask:

I was suprised at this part of the answer: "Microsoft's experimental Project Natick submerged an entire data center pod in the ocean, using a direct seawater cooling approach to demonstrate the potential for underwater facilities."

 
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Boyd

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I actually heard about that before. Hey - that would be the perfect companion for this, as proposed to power New City and the Pinelands supersonic jetport. Maybe it's finally time to build it after all these years? The AI folks are very big on nuclear power. :D

nuke.png
 

Boyd

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I was just reading through that "New City" proposal again (see link in my post above). Reminds me of the science fiction classic "Things to Come" from the 1930's and not 1970's. Anyway, not to worry, the actual proposal doesn't really say the power plant would be offshore, just "East of the new city". And best of all - no smokestacks!

Screen Shot 2025-09-17 at 7.03.41 PM.png


Maybe this all deserves another look? New City would be a perfect location for massive AI data centers, with convenient monorail access to the supersonic jet port for all the international data scientists who would regularly visit. And anyway, who needs all those pine trees? I'm sure the federal government could help out by rescinding the federal pinelands protections. :ninja:
 
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bobpbx

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He had to be writing about Oyster Creek. Have to look at the time line, it was maybe the longest running nuclear plant in the country.
 

bobpbx

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I drove by there a couple days ago. I'm sure there will be something else there that will revive it as a power center. At one point they were thinking of taking the wind farm power to there to distribute it. But LBI rich people smashed that idea.
 
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bobpbx

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I was in the Jones Road fire area this week, and I was stunned to see thousands of new plants germinate without the fire even touching the ground. I was surprised by that, so I asked the question. This reply is awesome in it's arrangement. Took less than 5 seconds.

 
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Boyd

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"To put that power demand in perspective, 10 gigawatts equals the output of roughly 10 nuclear reactors, which typically output about 1 gigawatt per facility. Current data center energy consumption ranges from 10 megawatts to 1 gigawatt, with most large facilities consuming between 50 and 100 megawatts. OpenAI's planned infrastructure would dwarf existing installations, requiring as much electricity as multiple major cities."
 

bobpbx

Piney
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Oct 25, 2002
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Pines; Bamber area

"To put that power demand in perspective, 10 gigawatts equals the output of roughly 10 nuclear reactors, which typically output about 1 gigawatt per facility. Current data center energy consumption ranges from 10 megawatts to 1 gigawatt, with most large facilities consuming between 50 and 100 megawatts. OpenAI's planned infrastructure would dwarf existing installations, requiring as much electricity as multiple major cities."
I question how fast they are trying to do this, but ignoring the people's need for cheaper power. Instead of 4 or 5 different companies going hog wild building nuclear power plants, some with differing plans, the government should lead this nuclear expansion in a more sane and structured way.
 

Boyd

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10 gigawatts? Bah, small change.... :ninja:

"In less than 48 hours, OpenAI has announced commitments equal to 17 nuclear plants or about nine Hoover Dams. The plan will require the amount of electricity needed to power more than 13 million U.S. homes."

"The biggest bottleneck for AI isn’t money or chips — it’s electricity. Altman has put money into nuclear companies because he sees their steady, concentrated output as one of the only energy sources strong enough to meet AI’s enormous demand."



Just to put that 13 million homes number into context, a google search (without AI) says there are about 3.5 million households in New Jersey and 7.8 million in New York, which is "only" 11.3 million homes combined.
 
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Boyd

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If I understand this, there's just no way that nuclear power can provide what they need today (or anytime soon), so the power will come from the grid that we all use. I wonder how that will work out? :confused: This stuff is just crazy....

Chien, however, is blunt about the near-term limits. “As far as I know, the amount of nuclear power that could be brought on the grid before 2030 is less than a gigawatt,” he said. “So when you hear 17 gigawatts, the numbers just don’t match up.”
[...]
He said nuclear may be unavoidable in the long run if AI keeps expanding, but cautioned that “in the short term, there’s just not that much spare capacity”—whether fossil, renewable, or nuclear. “How can we expand this capacity in the short term? That’s not clear,” he said.

 

SpinyPiney

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Jan 15, 2013
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Have a son who is a college professor. He gave his last year's final exam to Google AI and it aced it. He then gave Google AI's answers to Chat GPT asking if it was prepared by a student without AI assistance or AI. Chat GPT identified it as being prepared by Google AI.
My wife is a professor as well, her and several others have practically stopped assigning written papers all together in many courses because of Chat GPT. She says 90% of them are written by AI and coming out and accusing students of cheating can get messy, so there’s no point to them.
 
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