I think this speaks to the profound duplicity found inside humans. As if they just don't like the consequences of their actions waved in their face. In a lot of jurisdictions, data HAS to be stored locally, for privacy law reasons. So the data center has to go somewhere in the country, and the data center has to draw power from some local source. Given this reality, you just want the power to be clean. An analogy would be that "locals are appalled when they discover that eating meat requires killing animals". Given this reality, you just want the killing to be ethical. Maybe, like meat, put the data centers in some sparsely populated outskirts, out of sight and out of mind, and don't talk about it, sounds like that's what people really want here.
Sadly, the question is "are they part of my tribe or not?"
I see it over and over again in my city in coastal California. Car dealership, gas stations? A-OK, they help me out. Instead let's go do a climate protest of a bank, an Amazon office, and a software as a service company, since they have Big Oil as clients. And let's conveniently forget the massive oil and car infrastructure from our city design, which creates huge amounts of demand for emissions. As long as the enemy is one- or two-degrees away in terms of connection, it's a target to be attacked.
> Datacenters are rediculously efficient (bigger ones even more so) compared to alternatives.
Only if you ignore the alternative of not doing something. Parkinson's law tells me there's a lot of strictly unnecessary things running on there as a means unto itself.
I'm not sure I understand the complaint - if power is going to be consumed regardless, what does it matter who/what consumes power from a particular source?
My main complaint is that foreign big tech companies, or rather their shareholders, often exploit local resources like green energy, sparse living space, people’s privacy to generate large profits and take it home. Often avoiding responsibility by not paying taxes.
It’s business as usual, different industry, same shit.
In many cases big tech companies are financing green electrical generation capacity. I don't know about this specific case, but in many cases the local green energy capacity is specifically built to power the data center.
It would be interesting to compare big tech’s total carbon output to other major industries and find out. Also neat would be environmental impact per economic output.
IMO, when your quality of life gets high enough, your lizard brain will find the most obscure problems to freak out about. From trying to avoid being eaten by lions to caring which continent the computers with electrons representing us digitally resides physically. What an amazing species we are.
We run a public cloud largely based on OpenStack components. While OpenStack can be daunting, using a configuration manager like Ansible makes any kind of deployments a lot simpler and reusable. We use Ansible internally to deploy Kubernetes to deploy new versions of OpenStack.
Tutorial[0] on how to use Ansible in combination with OpenStack.
Multipass is email provider agnostic, any email address can be used to authenticate users without a password. It's up to the service maintainer to handle authorisation.
Multipass is available as a Caddy plugin, a single binary and can be included in your Go project.
GoKit does that (http://gokit.io) – I heard about it on the changeling podcast [1]. Really cool set of scripts. Haven't used it personally though. There's also a changelog episode about Caddy [2], although I'm sure some of that will be outdated starting today.
Seconded. A lot of "Remote jobs" are basically inaccessible for people in Asia because their office hours are basically set to New York/SF time. I mean you could work nights but it kinda defeats the purpose of remote working IMO.
How about remote jobs with Australian companies? Timezome difference with Asia is negligible. Not sure if the Australian market is big enough to specifically target Australian companies remote jobs though.
My bet is on "humans".