• Eager Eagle
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    30530 days ago

    The power of 21000 homes for advertising.

    What’s most impressive is that it is even legal.

      • @CosmoNova
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        4029 days ago

        Is it? Last I‘ve heard it was bleeding money.

        • @[email protected]
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          429 days ago

          Probably because they’re not doing much with it. It’s $100/person to see the basic “Planet Earth” showing and almost $200 to see The Grateful Dead show. Previously they showed a Phish show. That’s it for options, and none of it sounds really appealing to me.

            • @[email protected]
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              128 days ago

              I’m sure these bands are all appealing to some, but it seems like they’re really squandering the potential with them playing the same two shows over and over for months.

        • @blakemiller
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          228 days ago

          This way some faulty internet lore. The money losses were from a fluke of timing the opening date of operations versus when quarterly finances were reported. Big startup costs meant the first numbers looked silly until they had enough events to get steady profits. They’re doing fine now.

          Internet should’ve known better too. It’s hard to lose in Vegas and the investors obviously knew what they were doing. The power costs are shocking for sure though. Yikes!

    • @[email protected]
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      4030 days ago

      I love this kind of shit. Building things for the sake of it is worth it. Not only as just expression, which may be hubris but it’s still expression. Also entertainment, inspiration, pushing the art of engineering, and just giving people something to do, and all the good that comes with that like personal and trade growth.

      A purely utilitarian life is a life only spent on survival. Not a life I want to live.

      • @assassinatedbyCIA
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        8430 days ago

        We can do that, but first let’s make sure everyone on the planet has clean water first.

      • Todd Bonzalez
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        5029 days ago

        A purely utilitarian life is a life only spent on survival. Not a life I want to live.

        Well, that hubris won’t afford you a livable world for much longer.

        We could have respected the planet that birthed us, and taken only what we needed. Instead we extracted every natural resource we could find, and left behind countless shattered ecosystems. Even as the walls close in, we accelerate our pettiness and perform acts of wastefulness that alone do measurable ecological damage, and we celebrate it because it is “cool”.

        • @AIhasUse
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          329 days ago

          If this is something you feel strongly about, then please stop eating factory farmed meat and animal products if you havent already. It is something you personally can actually do. It helps, and it will genuinely make you feel better. You may not have much power, but using the power you do have to help the team you claim to be on instead of the other team is a massive step forward.

          • Todd Bonzalez
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            1029 days ago

            Look, you’re not really wrong, but you get that this shit is why people get irritated with vegans right? We were talking about being wasteful with energy resources for the sake of capitalism and you came in with a lazy segue to animal rights and nutritional health.

            It’s a conversation that we should be having, but it’s also insufferable to constantly be shoehorning it into every conversation.

            • @[email protected]
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              29 days ago

              I don’t agree. The comment points out the single most effektive move an individal without political nor financial power can make to cut personal co2-emissions with just a change of habit. It’s not about veganism, animal rights or your health, it’s just about sanity. Us still eating meat even though we know better is an incredibly dumb waste of energy for the sake of pleasure, exactly like this shitty powereating globe.
              As long as >95% of the global population still consumes meat I understand the urge to bring this topic everywhere.

              • @[email protected]
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                129 days ago

                Take a train instead of a flight. Cycle to work or take public transport instead of driving. Install a heat pump or solar in your house. There are a million things people can do to cut down their emissions that can be as effective as becoming herbivores, depending on each one’s personal situation.

                Plus, I don’t have the numbers in my head but I’m pretty sure a locally grown fillet of chicken is more environmentally friendly than an avocado that has travelled across the Atlantic, so “buy local” would be probably better advice.

                • @[email protected]
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                  29 days ago

                  Yeah, so many things one should do. Yet nothing is as simple as paying for a different product next time you’re shopping your groceries.
                  Avocados are way less harmfull to our planet than local meat. People keep bringing this up so often it’s #20 on the Vegan Bullshit Bingo.

              • Todd Bonzalez
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                129 days ago

                Oh, you’re one of those “you can save the planet with your personal habits” people…

                You enjoy your salad. I’m wondering what it takes to firebomb an oil refinery.

                • @AIhasUse
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                  -329 days ago

                  And you are one of those “every problem on the planet is the fault of someone else other than me so I can do whatever I want with no regard for it’s affect on anyone else” people. Stay away from us if you can’t be bothered to carry your own weight, you just drag down people who actually give a shit about something other than their own immediate selfish gratification.

              • @[email protected]
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                -429 days ago

                The comment points out the single most effektive move an individal without political nor financial power can make to cut personal co2-emissions with just a change of habit.

                eating meat doesn’t emit co2

                • @danc4498
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                  229 days ago

                  Producing that meat does.

                  Note that the commenter didn’t say to quit all eating meat. They just said to quit eating “factory farmed” meat.

                  It’s not about eating meat, it’s about factory farming the meat and the damage to the environment caused by it.

            • @[email protected]
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              829 days ago

              You came in here with your absolutist utilitarian life above all else or we all die post just to respond with this because someone suggested you to stop eating meat. Beautiful.

            • @[email protected]
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              28 days ago

              That’s not veganism, that’s environmentalism. Veganism is recognizing that animals have the right not to be treated as property and have atrocities visited upon them. That the experiences of animals are real and matter. That their suffering is identical in nature to your own.

              Avoiding animal products for the good of the environment has nothing to do with veganism. At least understand what your childish knee-jerk reactions are actually reacting to.

          • @[email protected]
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            029 days ago

            It helps,

            no, it doesnt. despite the existence of vegans, meat production increases every year, year over year.

            • @AIhasUse
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              129 days ago

              And there’s crime so you might as well rape. What a pathetic cop out. You’re lucky there are so many people taking care of you.

              • @[email protected]
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                129 days ago

                And there’s crime so you might as well rape

                the claim is that by not consuming factory farmed meat, you make an impact on the amount of emissions from its production. this is not true. it is also not analogous to raping anyone.

                • @AIhasUse
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                  129 days ago

                  You honestly think that factory farm emissions font change if people don’t give them money for their product? If your head was any further down in the sand, the magma would melt it.

                  Analogies don’t indicate a similar level of morality. They are used to explain points to people who, for some reason, are unwilling or unable to otherwise understand.

      • @Cosmicomical
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        1229 days ago

        This isn’t pushing any boundaries, though. This is off the shelf technology. Anybody can do something big by throwing a shit ton of money at it. It would be pushing boundaries of tech or art if it was for instance super power efficient, or mind bending in any way. This is a fucking sphere, it’s the simplest shape and a rip off of the pyramids but less original and not even comparable in terms of durability.

        • @[email protected]
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          329 days ago

          It is absolutely pushing boundaries to be driving this many pixels at a frame rate that doesn’t take minutes to refresh. I build a lot of projects with addressable LEDs and the typical hobbyist stuff chokes out when you start trying to control more than a thousand or so. This thing has 256 million pixels inside and 1.2 million outside.

        • @[email protected]
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          229 days ago

          Could it not be argued that building this thing now gives people a chance at looking at the power draw and attempting to make it super efficient? Like now people have a tool to test things on.

          • @danc4498
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            329 days ago

            They did mention that they are working on making 70% of this powered by solar panels. Maybe this will push forward solar technology in some way.

      • JJROKCZ
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        429 days ago

        Sure but we’re burning tons of coal to have this thing advertise minion movies, not anything artistic or worthwhile.

    • @[email protected]
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      -930 days ago

      Advertising? This thing is essentially a theater. Yeah, it can run advertisement but anything with a screen can do that. It’s like saying a movie theatre is for advertising.

      • @[email protected]
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        2529 days ago

        It’s a 400 foot tall screen that’s constantly on and in view, even at night, which plays ads like 90% of the time. Calling it “essentially a theatre” is a huge understatement.

        • @Vash63
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          -529 days ago

          But the energy usage is quoted as peak for the entire venue - which is literally a theater / concert hall. It opened with a live U2 performance. The energy usage isn’t just for the displays, it includes all the power for the entire building, the concert speakers, heating/cooling, indoor lighting, any kitchen equipment, etc.

  • @PunnyName
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    Currently, an agreement is under review to ensure that 70% of the Sphere’s power needs will come from solar sources, with the other 30% from non-renewable energy that will be offset by renewable energy credits.

    Ahh yes, energy credits. AKA bullshit.

    • holgersson
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      5829 days ago

      We shouldnt call them energy credits, but rather indulgences.

      • @Windex007
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        1229 days ago

        Somewhere in an ancient crypt, the bones of Luther begin to twitch to life…

    • @[email protected]
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      29 days ago

      Hey!

      They’re not always BS. Just most of the time!

      Or are they? Some of the companies who are the best at it and seem to be genuinely trying have been shown not to be able to guarantee one way or the other.

      “Wait, someone cut down that forest we planted?!” (no joke)


      Edit: see REC clarification below (thanks!)

      • @[email protected]
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        1729 days ago

        Just to be clear, renewable energy credits are different than carbon offsets, and easier to guarantee because they’re often tied directly to a metered renewable energy source.

        That said, there are still junk RECs on the market, like those tied to energy that was produced up to 2 decades ago that nobody got around to claiming / retiring. Or RECs tied to energy sources that may have happened regardless of the REC sale.

        • @[email protected]
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          Ohhh good point! Wanted to edit that into my comment there even, thank you.

          The junk RE credits are really interesting. As is the “ha we were building that solar farm no matter what!” problem - reminds me of when that happens in… tax deductions I think.

      • @PunnyName
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        229 days ago

        At least I understand forests that are replanted over and over to be used for lumber, effectively reducing the use of old lumber for myriad products.

    • @[email protected]
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      929 days ago

      Energy credits — what a bunch of vacuous rhetoric.

      The reality is that it’s energy being taken away from the overall grid, requiring a larger grid and thus prolonging our dependence on non renewable energy while we build up renewable sources.

      If we weren’t so wasteful with our energy we wouldn’t need as much of it and it’d be easier to go fully renewable.

      • @Cosmicomical
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        Well this is not good math at all. If you create a project and offset all its power requirements, you haven’t added anything to the grid. The alternative is to not do stuff, which is not going to happen anytime soon*, so it’s a net good thing and needs to be incentivized, not disparaged.

        *Well it will happen after the water wars and plagues wipe us out, and the sphere will stop drawing any energy at that point.

    • @[email protected]
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      328 days ago

      Consider ”hate credits”… like imagine the KKK can do whatever it wants so long as they claim to offset it with “hate credits”…

  • @danc4498
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    14529 days ago

    Currently, an agreement is under review to ensure that 70% of the Sphere’s power needs will come from solar sources, with the other 30% from non-renewable energy that will be offset by renewable energy credits.

    Nevada has pledged to achieve net zero emissions of greenhouse gases by 2050, and the solar project under construction to help offset its energy debt is estimated to complete in 2027.

    How stupid is it that somebody can claim “Net Zero” greenhouse gas emissions when 30% of their power is greenhouse gas.

    Just gonna throw this out there. Fuck credits, charge a carbon tax.

    • capital
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      6729 days ago

      We’ll also ignore the fact that that solar could have been used to offset actual needs instead of this BS.

      • @[email protected]
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        1629 days ago

        If only Las Vegas were located somewhere that the sun shines almost all day every day. \s

        • @[email protected]
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          429 days ago

          I highly doubt the operating hours of this ball of decadence match the time when solar power peaks

        • @Usernameblankface
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          128 days ago

          If only the creators of the ball had enough profit coming in to put up more solar panels and build up a battery bank for the night so they wouldn’t take anything from the grid…

        • capital
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          029 days ago

          And yet they still couldn’t cover the last 30%.

            • capital
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              129 days ago

              Regardless, that energy could be going to offset other energy currently being produced by non-renewables no matter which way you slice it.

            • Morphit
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              129 days ago

              So build concentrated solar power and store the heat for after the sun sets. Bonus - thermal power plant turbines give inertia to the grid, which photo-voltaics don’t.

      • @duffman
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        128 days ago

        Vegas exists because of the BS.

    • @[email protected]
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      2929 days ago

      The word net does a lot of heavy lifting and it’s just a scam

      You can use 100% coal power and claim net zero by buying a forest

    • @w2tpmf
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      1629 days ago

      Well you don’t understand what “net” means.

      It doesn’t mean literally zero. It means colunm A and column B average out to zero.

      To acheive a real net zero, they have to save energy somewhere else that takes that column past 100% (Such as if their solar panels produce more energy than they use during certain times.)

      They probably just make some shit up to say their are saving extra somewhere they aren’t (so to that point, yes…credits are bullshit.)

    • @NecroSocial
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      328 days ago

      Fuck credits, charge a carbon tax.

      IMO it seems RECs are a better solution than carbon taxes at least in situations like this. With RECs you’re buying renewable energy to offset non-renewables, with a carbon tax the company is just giving the government money for use of non-renewables. Only funds spent on RECs in this case actually go to supporting the renewable energy sector. I’m no expert in this stuff so I could be off, just how I understand it.

    • @Usernameblankface
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      328 days ago

      Maybe, I mean just maybe, they can run this thing only as long as the solar generated power lasts, and then turn it off 30% of the time.

    • @Sorgan71
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      229 days ago

      They never claimed net zero. They plan to achieve net zero by 2050

      • @danc4498
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        129 days ago

        Yeah, that’s in the quote. I’m more complaining about the concept of “net zero”.

  • @ShittyBeatlesFCPres
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    13729 days ago

    Las Vegas in general is a testament to the hubris of humanity and an admittedly impressive technical feat. Does it even exist without the Hoover Dam?

    • @batmaniam
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      5529 days ago

      I don’t know about power, but Vegas is actually incredibly water efficient. Due to the way the water rights work with the Colorado river, they’re not allowed very much, but it doesn’t “count” if you put it back in. So nearly every drop they use is treated and put back (probably cleaner, tbh). Boggles the brain, but somehow it’s actually a fairly sustainable city. More than any other other major metro, in any event.

      • DevopsPalmer
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        3329 days ago

        Considering they are in a literal desert, they would have to be fairly sustainable to exist in the first place. Not saying it’s not super impressive, my dad lived out there when they were building up a lot of the expanded infrastructure and he has some cool stories about how he saw the desert on the outskirts disappear as they added in all the water and transportation stuff

        • @batmaniam
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          1829 days ago

          Thrilled you asked! So yes: Treatment is always required, but the final destination of the treated water can vary. For instance, in a lot of places they may have municipal water TO a home or business, but that may be discharged to septic, as opposed to the river. Also in a lot of areas, water may be taken out of an underground aquifer (either by private well or a municipality) but when treated it may be discharged into a river or ocean. That can create problems because if you’re near the coast, the empty space in the aquifer may be filled by salt/brackish water that can lead to salinity rises in the aquifer. To solve that some places turn to “ground water recharge”, which is just a fancy way of saying “we built a big well to put it back in the aquifer”.

          Increasingly, you’re seeing some places essentially sell their treated water. Santa Rosa CA, for instance, built an entire pipeline that goes from their treatment facility to another municipality to be injected into their groundwater.

          So yes, everywhere treats it, but the final destination makes a difference. Las Vegas (or anyone else on the river) only gets credit for what goes back into the river, so any evaporation etc is a problem. It sounds trivial, but there is a reason those other strategies exist. It essentially doubles every pipe, limits where you can park a treatment plant etc. Vegas also does some great grey water re-use. That essentially means it doesn’t go “back” but can get used many many times, limiting the initial draw.

          Wastewater is funny because it’s far from rocket science, but the numbers to implement any of it get staggering very quickly.

          • @captainlezbian
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            929 days ago

            Wastewater isn’t rocket science. It’s just harder and significantly more important. Every engineering discipline makes fun of the civils, but the fact is none of us are half as critical to modern life as them. Every benefit any of us claim rests on their backs. The flow of electricity is a civil engineering feat, the flow of water to and from our homes, businesses, and farms is a civil engineering feat (and critical to health), as is our transportation networks, our entire constructed environment, and even crazy and weird shit like controlling the location of critical rivers.

            • @batmaniam
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              629 days ago

              oh I’m not shortchanging it, I work in the field. It’s crazy how “simple” it is in concept and hard to deliver. But it’s on par with antibiotics with how many lives it’s changed. Like you said, it’s like a lot of civil stuff. A solid highway system, for instance. Just some dirt with fancy rocks on it right? Righhhhhhht?

              And don’t get me wrong, wastewater has tons of complications. Any plant is operated in equal parts science, engineering, and art. It’s a living, breathing, bioreactor. They’ve each got their own distinct personality.

            • @[email protected]
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              129 days ago

              I actually thought about going into civil engineering in school, but I ended up really liking Computer Science instead. In high school, I was waffling between being a software patent attorney and a civil engineering attorney, but once I took some CS classes, I decided software patents suck and I really wanted to work with computers.

              I have a lot of respect for our civil engineers. My state is experimenting with a variety of civil engineering stuff, like paints for our highways (should help visibility in crappy winter conditions), alternative grass mixtures to cut water use (less engineering and more horticulture, but whatever), and expanding trains. I kind of wish I was involved with that, but I still really like my job, so I just follow that kind of stuff as a hobby. Bridges, trains, and tunnels rock.

              • @captainlezbian
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                229 days ago

                Yeah in retrospect I wish I’d gone civil. It wasn’t offered at my school but I went industrial because I loved both engineering and psychology. Civil would’ve meant I did more good and got less poisoned by my career

          • @jaybone
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            129 days ago

            Where does Santa Rosa’s wastewater go to?

    • prole
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      629 days ago

      It was also, literally, built by the mob

  • @InvaderDJ
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    7629 days ago

    It’s funny, I think Vegas is perfectly fine as the city of sin so things like this really don’t phase me. It was built on the idea of crime and excess.

    What does seem weird to me is how in a desert, why isn’t everything solar? The sun is their only natural resource besides sand. Every rooftop and parking lot and flat surface possible seems like it should be a panel.

    • @aidan
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      1329 days ago

      Vegas is surrounded by empty desert, they don’t need to use rooftops and parking lots

      • @fukurthumz420
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        3229 days ago

        even deserts host life. it’s kind of a ecological misnomer that we could just cover the deserts of the world in solar panels. that would have serious repercussions.

        • @aidan
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          328 days ago

          What repercussions could covering a few acres more in the mojave with solar panels have?

        • AutistoMephisto
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          128 days ago

          Honestly if we could get space elevators figured out, the best place to put solar panels would be in the upper atmosphere. Tethered to the ground by massive columns that feed the energy they collect to massive capacitors on the ground?

        • @[email protected]
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          Also, the ocean is a desert with its life underground and the perfect disguise above.

    • @[email protected]
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      -1129 days ago

      Solar only works during the day. During night you need batteries which are not renewable. Mining lithium trashes ecosystems and we probably have enough for like 50 more years at this rate, cobalt is extracted through slave labour. And we’ve seen how well recycling works for other materials which are less complex. So all these renewables aren’t all that green in every aspect. Unless we solve the energy storage problem it isn’t as simple as putting up more panels.

      • @[email protected]
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        You know, I’m getting really sick of these comments where people think they know what they’re talking about and repeat a bunch of talking points about lithium.

        Lithium is not going to be the basis of a renewable grid. We need it for EVs because it’s the best Wh/kg that we have right now, but we don’t care so much about weight for grid storage. Cost/kg is the main measure we care about there (though there are some other considerations in specific conditions). We already have tech being deployed in the field that’s better than lithium for grid storage. Flow batteries, flywheels, pumped hydro, or just heating up sand or rocks. Others, like sodium batteries, are being manufactured and will probably find their way into real products in the next few years.

        • @[email protected]
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          -129 days ago

          Chill, no need to be stressed. Part of the ideas you mentioned are already implemented in some cases, but they are not without drawbacks. Pumped hydro is good, but has high maintainance costs, messes with the fish and requires large bodies of water, how do you get tbat in the desert? Flywheels have good inertia, great for stabilizing the grid, Ireland has some for that exact reason, but can’t store a whole lot. And heating up roxks and sand may work if you need heat at night, but you need electricity, so you need water to turn into steam to produce it. Sodium batteries look the most promising, we’ll see how they develop. But until we get these storqge facilities built, adding more solar would only destabilise the grids even more.

          • @linearchaos
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            228 days ago

            So if you knew this which is a reasonable post why do you post the propaganda piece before?

            • @[email protected]
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              What propaganda? I think you have to go back and read my post once more… The thread started from solar panels in the desert. At the moment the most widely used grid storage is pumped hydro, how will you do that in the desert? Next most used tech RIGHT NOW is lithium batteries. Other solutions exist, but how many are there implemented and ready to capture that energy right now? Oh, not so many? Then putting up more solar panels hoping that one day we have the storage for them is foolish, these panles lose efficiency over time. I don’t have an agenda to spread, there is no propaganda, I am only talking about the an issue which exists, which is energy storage, for which we have some solutions, with their pros and cons, but not close to being implemented.

      • Gormadt
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        1129 days ago

        Sodium batteries (which are on the market now) are way more environmentally friendly than Lithium batteries.

        The materials are very accessible by comparison to Lithium batteries and they’re way more stable.

  • @[email protected]
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    29 days ago

    28,000,000 watts

    That’s usually written as 28MW. I know some Americans don’t like metric much, but one of the points of metric is that you don’t ever need to write that many zeroes - you just need to use the right prefix (kilo, mega, giga, tera, etc) on the unit.

    • @[email protected]
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      3229 days ago

      True, but 28 million watts really puts things in perspective when your average PSU is less than 1000w.

      • @[email protected]
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        1228 days ago

        Exactly. This is literally a PC gamer article. Writing it out like that really puts it into perspective for the average reader.

      • @[email protected]
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        728 days ago

        That’s true.

        average PSU is less than 1000w

        Unrelated but I wish it was easier to find lower-wattage PSUs. My local PC store doesn’t have anything under 650W. I know modern GPUs use a lot of power, but not all PCs use a GPU! I have a home server where 400W would be more than enough, yet the smallest I could find was 550W, in stock from just one manufacturer (Be Quiet).

        • @tomkatt
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          928 days ago

          I mean, it should be fine, just because the PSU can provide more watts doesn’t mean the system is actually using that much power. I have an 800w PSU in my gaming rig, but its average load is only 240 - 320w during gaming (I’ve measured it by powering the system with a portable Ecoflow battery).

            • @riodoro1
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              Where are you getting this from? Intuition?

              I think the quiescent current and losses are less in a well engineered psu.

              • hedidwot
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                1428 days ago

                This is verifiable in manufactures data sheets.

                Efficiency at less than 20% and greater than 80% loads isn’t great relative to in between those ends.

                This is compounded by lower wattage PSUs being more limited with regard to features and benefits.

                If you end up with a 650w PSU and your system idles at 80 watts for the bulk of a working day you spend long periods of time in this less efficient window.

                We need to see some quality 300w to 600w designs come back onto the market.

                • @[email protected]
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                  128 days ago

                  Well, it depends on how much you’re spending: 80 plus titanium units, for example, are 90% efficient at both ends of the spectrum, which is as good as a 80 plus gold unit at the ideal 50% load.

                  Of course, they’re expensive, and thus maybe not really the best solution since the wasted power is probably never going to add up to the cost of the better PSU, but there is enough of a demand for high and low load efficiency that it’s a thing that you could go buy.

      • @calcopiritus
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        228 days ago

        Way easier to compare 28MW to 1KW.

    • @[email protected]
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      29 days ago

      you just need to use the right prefix (kilo, mega, giga, tera, etc) on the unit.

      Oh, thanks.

      Bruh, it’s PC Gamer.

      quick edit: Hey! Why aren’t you converting it to Joules?

      • @[email protected]
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        2029 days ago

        Because Joule is the SI unit of energy, meanwhile the Watt is the SI unit of power, equivalent to one Joule per second.

        “Converting” joules to watts would be like converting m/s to US dollars.

        • @HerrBeter
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          728 days ago

          I liked the analogy but I do think it would be clearer to say something like joules = money in bank account and Watt = spending per second

  • Todd Bonzalez
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    5529 days ago

    Wait, why do they need 150 GPUs for a 1.2 megapixel display?

    That’s less than 1080p!

    Who engineered this monstrosity?

    • @yggdar
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      29 days ago

      They say there are 16 screens inside, each with a 16k resolution. Such a screen would have 16x as many pixels as a 4k screen. The GPUs power those as well.

      For the number of GPUs it appears to make sense. 150 GPUs for the equivalent of about 256 4k screens means each GPU handles ±2 4k screens. That doesn’t sound like a lot, but it could make sense.

      The power draw of 28 MW still seems ridiculous to me though. They claim about 45 kW for the GPUs, which leaves 27955 kW for everything else. Even if we assume the screens are stupid and use 1 kw per 4k segment, that only accounts for 256 kW, leaving 27699 kW. Where the fuck does all that energy go?! Am I missing something?

      • Vanix
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        29 days ago

        This is a complete shot in the dark but could the huge power draw come from needing some intense industrial cooling/airflow stuff in/on the sphere?

        Edit: forgot a word

        • @[email protected]
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          29 days ago

          The big power draw is because of the sheer amount of light it dumps out. You try lighting up 54,000 square meters of LED panel to a few hundred nits like a pc monitor, and see how much power it takes.

        • @[email protected]
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          729 days ago

          complete shot in the dark

          Man, I wanna delay the stupid edgy joke I’m making but I can’t help myself

      • Todd Bonzalez
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        1629 days ago

        Oh Jesus, there are 16 16K screens? I didn’t read that right at all. That’s completely superfluous. The Las Vegas Sphere is an affront to God.

        • @Cosmicomical
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          1429 days ago

          In the future there will be myths that we once had standards such as html but after we tried to build this sphere, god cursed us to use only incompatible proprietary protocols

      • Todd Bonzalez
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        Ah, you’re right, that’s 1.2 megapixel for the exterior, and 132 megapixel for the interior.

        That’s a substantial increase, but it’s still the equivalent of about 16 4K screens, which absolutely does not need 150 GPUs!

        Edit: No, I was wrong, this entire monstrosity is overengineered to over two gigapixels on the inside, and that’s absolutely ridiculous.

        • @[email protected]
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          229 days ago

          Anything most likely driving factor here?

          Extreme resolution requirements, massive number of LED elements, real-time rendering and synchronization needs, complex content processing, load distribution and redundancy, future-proofing capabilities, fraudulent kickback scheme

    • JackbyDev
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      2629 days ago

      I believe that’s implied in the “hubris” bit.

    • @UnderpantsWeevil
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      1929 days ago

      Its one of the smaller atrocities in Vegas, particularly when compared to the Bellagio Fountain or the food waste generated by all those casino dining halls.

      • @chiliedogg
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        729 days ago

        The fountains aren’t quite as wasteful as they seem. They use a lot of water compared to a house, but way less than some car washes.

        • @CompostMaterial
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          629 days ago

          Plus it is recycled. They would only replace what is lost due to evaporation or after a drain and cleaning.

          • Corgana
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            29 days ago

            I looked it up (because the air is very dry in Nevada) and about 32,000 gallons of water per day are evaporated at the Bellagio fountains.

            Source: The Las Vegas Sun

            An average car wash uses 40 gallons per car and washes a hundred cars per day: Source

            • @chiliedogg
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              129 days ago

              A car wash uses 80 gallons per car. The car wash by my office probably washes a thousand cars a day.

    • @[email protected]
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      -729 days ago

      Yeah we should have never invented televisions or records either! And don’t even get me started on cell phones. Just waste waste waste.

      Why, if it were up to me we would all still be hunting and gathering!

      • @[email protected]
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        029 days ago

        Apples to oranges dude, this is for pure spectacle that wears off after five minutes. Plus any data gained from it was at the lab they prototyped it I believe in Burbank. This aint really a sign of progress, and itll be funny to see what happens to it when it inevitably breaks.

  • @[email protected]
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    3229 days ago

    I don’t know what they need so many GPUs for. There’s 16 displays inside, and the sphere itself has fewer pixels than even 1 of the internal displays. You could probably run the sphere off a laptop if you aren’t trying to do anything fancy.

    Maybe they plan on doing crazy live simulations on it or something. I can’t imagine what kind of displayed image would actually use all 150 of them. Nvidia A6000 cards are damn powerful.

    • Yardy Sardley
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      2329 days ago

      Probably have a few cards running the displays and the rest of them mining some sphere-themed memecoin

    • shastaxc
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      1029 days ago

      I guess the practicality of the decision depends on the finances. Did they actually buy the cards or were they gifted by nvidia for free advertising?

      • @[email protected]
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        1529 days ago

        It does seem suspiciously like they picked 150 completely arbitrarily to make the project sound impressive, when they could have easily done it with 20. I’m sure a bunch of people in the middle made a bunch of money off that transaction too. Or like you said, maybe this is Nvidia doing some guerrilla marketing

    • @WhyFlip
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      -629 days ago

      You don’t know. Full stop.

      • @[email protected]
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        My job has been to run things on GPUs for almost 10 years now. The only thing anyone practical is doing on that many GPUs is AI training, massive scientific simulations, or crypto mining. 1 or 2 of them is enough to run something like ChatGPT.

        Real-time graphics it turns out don’t scale well across multiple GPUs. There’s a reason SLI has gone away for consumer GPUs. At the current ratio, each of those $3000+ GPUs is only driving 8000 pixels (assuming each led puck is being used as 1 pixel, given their size). It makes no sense other than bragging rights

  • @Zachariah
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    3130 days ago

    Add a solar array and battery bank, a you might even have electricity left over. It’s in the desert after all.

    • @mPony
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      929 days ago

      Thunderdome was already taken

  • @[email protected]
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    2029 days ago

    Using the max power use of a video card to math this is ridiculous. It’s not at full TDP pushing this content. They aren’t playing max FPS 3D raytraced gaming, they’re playing videos.

    • @ByteJunk
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      2729 days ago

      What.

      The article says that, for the GPUs, they can have a “maximum power draw of 45,000 W at full tilt”.

      The 28 million W comes from the full system, and surely the massive displays, LEDs and eventually sound system makes up the bulk of that, the gfx cards are a rounding error…

    • @[email protected]
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      29 days ago

      Synchronizing that many screens into one/two continuous displays is not light computing work. Roughly every square foot is its own panel in commercial displays.

  • @drunkpostdisaster
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    2029 days ago

    Might as well just give up on the earth right now I guess