Waste heat from data centers can boost air temperatures in downwind neighborhoods by as much as 4 degrees Fahrenheit, researchers at Arizona State University report in a new study conducted in the Phoenix metro area, the hottest in the U.S.
In that case, could you put them in Minneapolis and run them in like January?
I used to live there, and during the winters it can get brutal. During one of those polar vortexes is the first time I ever saw an air temperature of negative 50 with a wind chill of negative 70.
You could put them in Canada way the fuck up north (good luck connecting them) right next to almost unlimited hydro power and it would still be silly.
Keep in mind heating of this magnitude is going to be bad in any place it is put. The fact they seem to put them in places like this tells me they don’t care about these centers actually working efficiently, just that they exist for an investor report.
Eh, Minneapolis gets cold, but it doesn’t quite get that cold. The record low was -34 degrees F (-37C). We do regularly hit -20F, but we haven’t hit -30 since 1996.
Nitpicking aside, I agree that the winters can get brutal.
I remember it got cold enough during that winter polar vortex thing that the power company was asking people to keep their homes at like 60 so that we didn’t overload the power grid and gas pressure. I want to say that was like 2016 or something when I used to live there.
I lived in southeast Minneapolis right near the U of M. I wasn’t there for the winter of 2013-2014 as I originally came in October of 2014 and lived there until 2019.
Oh, I know exactly where you’re talking about. As I said, I used to live in Southeast Minneapolis over by the U of M, but I used to work near Franklin and Nicollet. There was this pizza place I used to visit on 24th and Nicolet quite often. And there was also a place called Glamdall Donuts on like 26th and Nicolet that I used to visit pretty often.
I used to take the MetroTransit 2 bus to and from work.
Weak ass infrastructure. I live in an area that gets to be -50 (C but at that point does not really matter) almost every year and don’t have those sort of issues. (well yet as we seem to be poisoned by your stupid us thinking of cut every corner)
In that case, could you put them in Minneapolis and run them in like January?
I used to live there, and during the winters it can get brutal. During one of those polar vortexes is the first time I ever saw an air temperature of negative 50 with a wind chill of negative 70.
Nah we dont want them either. I don’t want my electricity prices to skyrocket more than they already have.
Yeah, fair enough.
You could put them in Canada way the fuck up north (good luck connecting them) right next to almost unlimited hydro power and it would still be silly.
Keep in mind heating of this magnitude is going to be bad in any place it is put. The fact they seem to put them in places like this tells me they don’t care about these centers actually working efficiently, just that they exist for an investor report.
Power is more expensive than water. So they use evaporative cooling in an arid climate.
As a bonus, solar should be plentiful there so the price they end up paying for electricity from the grid might be cheaper too?
Eh, Minneapolis gets cold, but it doesn’t quite get that cold. The record low was -34 degrees F (-37C). We do regularly hit -20F, but we haven’t hit -30 since 1996.
Nitpicking aside, I agree that the winters can get brutal.
I remember it got cold enough during that winter polar vortex thing that the power company was asking people to keep their homes at like 60 so that we didn’t overload the power grid and gas pressure. I want to say that was like 2016 or something when I used to live there.
Did you live in Minneapolis or a suburb?
Winter of 2013-2014 was pretty brutal. I’m not sure about 16-17 though.
I lived in southeast Minneapolis right near the U of M. I wasn’t there for the winter of 2013-2014 as I originally came in October of 2014 and lived there until 2019.
Seward neighborhood? I used to work at Franklin & 22nd - near the Pizza Luce. That was before you lived here, though.
Now I live near Minnehaha Falls.
Oh, I know exactly where you’re talking about. As I said, I used to live in Southeast Minneapolis over by the U of M, but I used to work near Franklin and Nicollet. There was this pizza place I used to visit on 24th and Nicolet quite often. And there was also a place called Glamdall Donuts on like 26th and Nicolet that I used to visit pretty often.
I used to take the MetroTransit 2 bus to and from work.
Glam doll! I haven’t been there in ages. I should pop over there this weekend.
I think I know the pizza shop you mentioned. I don’t remember its name, but it’s a little hole-in-the-wall place near the MIA.
Weak ass infrastructure. I live in an area that gets to be -50 (C but at that point does not really matter) almost every year and don’t have those sort of issues. (well yet as we seem to be poisoned by your stupid us thinking of cut every corner)