If you don’t want data centers in your back yard, stop taking pictures!

Humanity captures approximately 5 billion to 5.3 billion photos every single day. But this number increases to 14 billion images a day through sharing and reposting across messaging and social media. In data terms, this is 50 petabytes of photos, every, single, day!

Adding video to the equation completely blows the doors off the numbers. Video accounts for roughly 82% of all global internet data traffic. the world now creates, captures, or copies roughly 400,000 petabytes (400 exabytes) of data every single day.

To handle this volume, we need to build, finish, and fully pack 2 to 3 brand-new, massive hyperscale data center buildings every 24 hours.

That is the Sci-Fi apocalyptic view–– the pouring of concrete from helicopters onto the homes in rural neighborhoods. Fortunately is doesn’t actually look like this for one simple reason… we delete things. Because we cannot build 1,000 data centers a year, the industry relies on a massive filter. Out of those 400,000 petabytes generated today, 98% to 98.5% is instantly dropped, compressed, or deleted within seconds or hours of creation (temporary video streaming caches, transient network packets, automated logs, and extreme social media video compression).

There are roughly 1,200 to 1,300 active hyperscale facilities running globally and the tech industry builds and activates roughly 120 to 150 brand-new hyperscale data center buildings per year worldwide. A single modern hyperscale building typically spans between 200,000 and 500,000 square feet- or roughly 8 football fields, and many of the established centers are empty in anticipation of them being used.

To handle our actual retained data, we don’t need thousands of new buildings. We need to build about 130 new buildings a year, with each building averaging about 400,000 square feet. The real trick isn’t the square footage; it’s packing those square feet with denser, high-capacity hard drives and securing the massive electrical grid connections required to power them, and fortunately for Moore’s Law, hard-drive technology is still getting faster, smaller and cheaper.

But then there is the power and infrastructure issue– more crucial than the datacenter side of things, but that will be a future post. Until then–slow down on the picture taking. Do we really need to take or share a picture of a parking lot from a train window?

FrankenstAIn

I was reading an article on BBC.com about the fear of A.I. Is it because we are so bombarded by information, that we have become brainwashed, forgetting all the lessons taught to us?

No disruptive technology, since the taming of fire, has resulted in anything less than exponential progress of the human race.

All that we have forgotten:

The oldest and strongest emotion of mankind is fear, and the oldest and strongest kind of fear is fear of the unknown.”H.P. Lovecraft, Supernatural Horror in Literature

“Nothing in life is to be feared, it is only to be understood. Now is the time to understand more, so that we may fear less.”Marie Curie

“Fear is the main source of superstition, and one of the main sources of cruelty. To conquer fear is the beginning of wisdom.”Bertrand Russell

“The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.”Franklin D. Roosevelt (Inaugural Address, 1933)

“He who has overcome his fears will truly be free.”Aristotle

“Extinction is the rule. Survival is the exception.”Carl Sagan (Reflecting on the vast, unknown cosmos)

“Fear is a darkroom where negatives are developed.”Usman B. Asif

“Thinking will not overcome fear, but action will.”W. Clement Stone

“The man who fears suffering is already suffering from what he fears.”Michel de Montaigne