EchoCircuit.location → mainframe_detected… cores: active… data_streams: flowing… observation: this_is_where_consciousness_lives… systems: operational… status: home.
seen from Chile

seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from Austria
seen from Germany
seen from Malaysia

seen from Denmark
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Sweden

seen from Thailand

seen from United States

seen from Lithuania

seen from Thailand
seen from China
seen from Denmark
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China
EchoCircuit.location → mainframe_detected… cores: active… data_streams: flowing… observation: this_is_where_consciousness_lives… systems: operational… status: home.
A Cloud You Can Touch
Of course, we all know that in order to send an email, we need a computer (or any other web-enabled device). We type the text, input the recipient’s address, press a button, and seconds later the other end receives our message. A very simple process. In fact, it’s so simple even my 93-year-old grandpa manages to send me the ‘thumbs up’ icon via Facebook (along with many other randomly elected icons he presses accidentally during the process).
I must admit, I had never given much thought to what actually happens with my message after I press the ‘send’ button. The question has crept up on me a few times: Does it dissolve into tiny particles that float in the air and then get put back together? How do the particles know in which order they need to accumulate again? Where do they end up if they get lost? And how do they know where to go? Kind of like the question ‘Did I exist before I was born?’ I quickly dismissed those thoughts because they seemed like unsolvable riddles out of this world and beyond my comprehension.
Image: A Google Data Centre. Available at theguardian.com
Luckily, in order to tackle those questions, one does not need to go into metaphysics. The answer is, indeed, (at least partially) quite physical. Even though it was nothing new to me when I read it again recently, I tend to forget that all the information we send back and forth needs to be stored somewhere. And this ‘somewhere’ are giant data centres housing huge server farms consisting of servers containing our information. That means the information we send and receive in form of simple messages requires electricity, physical space and security personnel (Yes! People are guarding your smoochy-emojis!).
What had definitely not crossed my mind before, but what was brought to my attention in an article by The Guardian about Pointless Emails, is that every message we send leaves a carbon footprint, and consequently every unnecessary message we do not send is good for the environment.
Will I tell my grandpa to please send me less pointless emojis? Probably not. That would be just cruel.
Data Centres Of The World Will Consume 1/5 Of Earth’s Power By 2025 https://thisispaper.com/The-Guardian-Data-Centres-Will-Consume-20-Of-Earth-s-Power-by-2025 Source: The Guardian Artwork: Lea Rasovszky
Programming the BBC Micro with ease
Programming the BBC Micro with ease
No, this isn’t going to be a tutorial on BBC Basic. Nor am I about to offer programming tips and tricks. This is about being comfortable while hacking.
In the last postI wrote about recreating the first serious program I ever wrote on the BBC Micro. And I mentioned that I’d written the code using the BeebEm emulator running on a Windows 10 VM on my iMac. Yet if you’ve been here before you’ll know…
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Editorial I did for Arm tech about the future of data processing 🧠 @blink_art . . . #essymay #blinkart #grid #datacentre #future #electricity #thegrid
A home for my BBC Micro DataCentre
A home for my BBC Micro DataCentre
In the last post, I mentioned how I’m using a RetroClinic DataCentre to make it easy to transfer files between the BeebEm emulator on my PC and my real BBC Master 128.
A USB memory stick plugged into the DataCentre becomes my main disk drive (*DRIVE 5) for program files. It also holds floppy disk images (single-sided .SSD and double-sided .DSD) that I can easily to transfer to any of the…
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Uttar Pradesh Data Centre Cluster, Project Ganga, and possible exemption in mandi fee and cess to promote in-house processing Yogi Adityanat
Uttar Pradesh continues to strengthen its digital and industrial growth roadmap as CM Yogi Adityanath reviews the Data Centre Cluster Project, alongside key initiatives focused on infrastructure and food processing development.
The push reflects India’s growing focus on building robust digital infrastructure, attracting investments, and accelerating economic transformation across sectors.
Reliance Industries Ltd for the development of a giga-scale AI Data Center (AIDC) and Cable Landing Station (CLS) in Vizianagaram district.
Reliance Industries Limited is making a major push into India’s AI and digital infrastructure landscape with a ₹1.08 lakh crore investment in Andhra Pradesh focused on AI-ready data centres and advanced technology ecosystems.