JiOne Posted October 15 Report Posted October 15 Enni threads ra ayya laoudalo google ki Okate bajana… 1 Quote
Captain_nd_Coke Posted October 15 Report Posted October 15 Bajana post oka padi unte daani meeda edche posts vanda unnai vaay Quote
CanadianMalodu Posted October 15 Report Posted October 15 22 minutes ago, JiOne said: Enni threads ra ayya laoudalo google ki Okate bajana… Matter weak aithene, publicity Peak untadhi. Telisindhi ee kadha. Okaside Bramaravthi lo panulu avvatam ledhu, inko vaipu emo raithulaki urea ledhu, medical colleges PPP meedha Jagan ki public lo grand reception debba meedha debba. So, Google Data center ki ee hadavidi. Aa data center ki water ekkada nunchi istharu, electricity entha subsidy istharu, Asalu electricity ekkada nunchi testharu, grid sangathi enti, land entha ki icharu, ivi emi mataladaru. Intha chesthe vache jobs 500 kooda undavu ani naa feeling, aa remote jobs poga. I'm simply comparing it with Citadel campus in Nevada. Vellu ane indirect jobs kooda naaku doubt ee. Asalu aa $15 billion number kooda doubte. Citadel campus construction ki oka billion, maintenance ki inko 0.5 billion USD ayyindhi ani chadivanu. Deniki 15 billion number publicity kosam cheppinchara ani kooda kodathandhi. @Teluguredu 1 Quote
andhra_jp Posted October 15 Report Posted October 15 The Vizag google announcement comes a day after Google revealed plans to invest $9 billion by 2027 to expand its data center campus in Berkeley County, South Carolina, and support the ongoing construction of two new sites in Dorchester County. Ruth Porat, president and chief investment officer of Alphabet and Google, said in a LinkedIn post that the South Carolina investment would also fund “programs to protect energy affordability and train the local workforce for careers in the state’s growing tech and energy sector.” “This investment helps support job growth in South Carolina as it benefits from the upside of AI,” Porat added. Quote
andhra_jp Posted October 15 Report Posted October 15 A Giant New AI Data Center Is Coming to the Epicenter of America’s Fracking Boom CoreWeave and Poolside announce partnership for a data center built on a sprawling ranch in West Texas An Nvidia backed AI startup is planning to build a massive data-center complex with CoreWeave that is capable of generating its own power on a site that is two-thirds the size of Central Park. Poolside is joining with the cloud-infrastructure provider on a plan to build a data center on more than 500 acres of land that sits on a sprawling ranch in West Texas. The site is owned by the Mitchell family, which has run oil-and-gas companies for decades in the state and is located in the heart of the fracking boom. Poolside and CoreWeave aim to take advantage of natural gas produced in the Permian Basin, the epicenter of U.S. drilling activity. They are betting that the proximity to natural-gas resources could reduce costs and improve the long-term viability of the data center, as many planned facilities across the U.S. have been built without power generation capabilities. The project, called Horizon, represents a new model for building and financing AI-related computing expansions. In the near term, Poolside will gain access to a cluster of Nvidia AI computing resources provided by CoreWeave beginning in December. It plans to work with the company longer term on the broader build-out of a data center with two gigawatts of computing firepower, the electric-generation capacity of the Hoover Dam. Poolside is in the midst of a $2 billion fundraising round that would value the company at $14 billion, according to people familiar with the matter. It raised $500 million about a year ago at a $3 billion valuation. The coding-focused startup, which counts chip giant Nvidia among its investors, is one of several technology companies and incumbents seeking to build AI systems with humanlike intelligence. The scarcity of computing resources is emerging as a central bottleneck in the multitrillion-dollar AI arms race, with OpenAI and other companies announcing a dizzying array of data-center deals as they seek to maintain an edge. While many operators moved quickly to secure continued access to the chips needed to build and operate AI models, America doesn’t have enough data centers to accommodate the high demand for space. It is also far from certain whether many data centers will have sufficient power and water to operate without becoming a significant strain on local resources. “It is not about your headline numbers of gigawatts. It’s about your ability to deliver data centers,” Eiso Kant, a co-founder of Poolside, said in an interview. The ability to build data centers quickly is “the real physical bottleneck in our industry,” he said. Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence company, xAI, has raced to build massive data centers in the Deep South. OpenAI recently announced a flurry of new data-center projects and said it envisions a need for more than 20 gigawatts of computing capacity to meet the explosive demand for ChatGPT. Poolside and CoreWeave declined to provide details about the cost of leasing the Texas land from the Mitchell family, or the overall expected cost of the project. Kant said the industry standard for a two-gigawatt data center is about $16 billion, but Poolside expects its costs to be lower due to its use of off-site modular construction techniques. That total doesn’t include the cost of chips. Poolside plans to build a data center on more than 500 acres of land in West Texas. Poolside CoreWeave plans to serve as the anchor tenant for the first 250 megawatts of capacity, which is set to be completed by the end of next year. It has also reserved an additional 500 megawatts for future expansion. The companies expect to complete construction in the first quarter of 2027. Horizon plans to use an on-site gas plant built years ago by Occidental Petroleum and other infrastructure including pipelines will make it possible for the data center to generate its own power, Kant said. The project will also be built in a way that brings computing resources online over time rather than all at once, he said. The project is slated to be built on a sliver of the Mitchell family’s Longfellow Ranch, a property that spans hundreds of thousands of acres in West Texas that Kant said has the potential to emerge as an AI megaplex. It is located near natural-gas production and processing sites and already has long-haul fiber routes. Texas has been a sought-after arena for data-center construction with new sites such as the Stargate facility OpenAI is building with Oracle in Abilene. OpenAI and others plan numerous sites in the state, but some critics fear that the data centers will demand more power than the state’s grid is capable of providing. New legislation gives Texas’ grid operator the ability to cut off access remotely for large energy users such as data centers during emergencies. Quote
andhra_jp Posted October 15 Report Posted October 15 Karnataka IT Minister Priyank Kharge questioned the incentives offered by Andhra Pradesh, including Rs 22,000 crore in subsidies, discounted land and water tariffs, free transmission, and full GST reimbursement, raising concerns about their sustainability. Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.