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Startup aims to pay you to "Host a Datacenter in your yard"

Xebec

Well-known member
Data centers may be coming to your neighborhood as side installations associated with new homes—and in exchange would offer subsidized electricity and Internet access along with backup batteries to homeowners. The company behind the plan has already begun pilot testing in preparation for a 100-home trial run this year.

The “distributed data center solution” announced by the San Francisco startup SPAN would deploy thousands of XFRA nodes that contain liquid-cooled Nvidia RTX Pro 6000 Blackwell Server Edition GPUs operating with minimal noise, according to a press release.By harnessing excess power capacity among US households, SPAN aims to quickly expand the available compute for AI workloads without the costs and delays associated with trying to build warehouse-size data centers.

“Data centers are loud, ugly, and often drive up local electricity bills,” said Chris Lander, vice president of XFRA at SPAN, in correspondence with Ars. “[This] is quiet, discreet, and makes energy more affordable for the host and community.”

SPAN’s approach could avoid the significant land use and water consumption issues that come with huge data center projects, which may help sidestep growing community opposition to such developments. In a CNBC interview, SPAN also claimed it could install 8,000 XFRA units at a cost five times lower than building a typical 100-megawatt data center with the same compute capacity.

and
(video for the slightly snarkier take on this)
 
I don't blame them for trying this, but:

- The startup defines "quiet" is defined as 60 dB .. not quiet

- Having a box in your yard with 3 TB of RAM and several high end Nvidia AI GPUs, that fits in the back of a pickup truck -- seems to be asking for crime

- This will still end up increasing long term electricity costs to homeowners as the increased 'base' draw on the grid is going to push the existing transformers currently powering homes

- This device shares your home internet service .. privacy and security concerns abound, especially with the Palantir stack running on your home network

- There are a lot of other home owner electrical concerns (voltage swings, line noise, reduced power for dryers, EV charging conflicts, draining your home battery, etc.) that I could add here, too.
 
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