@moss_gossip@washingtonpost Baseless treehugger claims. If you’ve ever been to a data center you would know there are hardly any employees.
You know NOTHING about data centers
the noise is insignificant at a distance.
Emissions?? Nonsense. This won’t destroy the park or view.
Water is not an issue
You're wrong. It's already a reality here in Texas. A proposed 2,600-acre data center complex, "Comanche Circle," near Glen Rose, Texas, poses threats to Dinosaur Valley State Park's rural environment and water supply. "The project, featuring dozens of buildings and natural gas power plants, alongside a proposed 765-kV Oncorpower line, threatens to increase noise, air emissions, traffic, and consume high volumes of water." It will divert the river that runs through the park, and ruin its scenic value. We grew up with this park, and love it. Once our parks are destroyed, there will be no bringing them back. Buddy, they aren't making more land anymore. When it's ruined, it's ruined. I agree with Bernie on this, not Trump.
Sen. Bernie Sanders will introduce legislation today to block the construction of new data centers until lawmakers enact regulations on AI, laying down a marker on the populist left as Washington confronts public skepticism of the new technology. wapo.st/4tbhxGE
"Hey Republicans: I've gotten surgery to remove my Adam's apple, my forehead and my jaw."
"That makes me the equivalent of a biological female."
What is your reaction?
Teleportation is no longer just a science fiction fantasy it’s inching toward scientific reality. Building on decades of quantum research, scientists funded by the National Science Foundation have demonstrated a method that could soon allow teleportation between electrons, marking a massive step forward. The process relies on quantum entanglement, where two particles remain mysteriously linked, no matter the distance between them.
Unlike sci-fi transporters, quantum teleportation doesn’t move matter itself it moves information. Every quantum property of an atom can, in theory, be transmitted to another location, where it’s perfectly reconstructed while the original is erased. This means that future teleportation would send the data of a person’s atoms, not the atoms themselves effectively destroying one version while creating another.
The implications are profound. If a teleported human is a flawless copy, does consciousness travel too, or is it lost in the process? As the technology advances, scientists and philosophers alike must grapple with these questions. For now, teleportation remains in the quantum realm but its promise of instant travel and its haunting moral dilemmas could define the next frontier of physics.
Source/Credit: National Science Foundation | University of Rochester | Purdue University | Scientific research summaries
@Doubtfu1@ABC Perhaps YOU can learn anything YOU want to know from the internet, but not everyone is as naive and simple minded as you.
How sad that you never even considered that an internet search could reveal both correct and incorrect answers to same problem.
@ABC 90% of "higher" education is nothing but a scam.
Financial and intellectual grooming in the highest order.
Back in the day colleges and degree's had value. Now their propped up by emotions and gatekeepers.
You can learn anything you need to know using the internet.
Three medical schools are being investigated by the Trump administration over how race is used during the admissions process, marking the federal government's latest effort to reshape higher education. abcnews.link/7O1igJ3