AI, Microsoft and data center
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Large, “hyperscale” data centers are expanding rapidly in the United States and unless people are willing to give up the internet, cloud computing, navigation systems — and yes, even Netflix — communities should be planning how to locate and regulate them.
Hyperscale data centers are now powering AI models with a revolutionary architecture—at a staggering energy cost.
A data center development company led by former executives with Amazon Web Services (AWS) has joined with a leading investment group to launch a platform for hyperscale data centers in North America.
LightHouse Data Centers ("LightHouse"), a next-generation turnkey data center developer and operator, and Wharton Digital, an investment vehicle of Wharton Equity Partners ("Wharton"), today announced the launch of a fully integrated platform to develop,
Project Jupiter is one part of Stargate, an enormous high-tech enterprise. But it hasn’t been smooth sailing for developers, state regulators, and local residents.
Prometheus Hyperscale commits to community benefit agreements, local hiring, and transparency for all Wyoming data center sites.
Montgomery County officials are considering zoning changes that could pave the way for the region’s first hyperscale data center, following in the footsteps of Northern Virginia, which currently hosts the world’s largest concentration of such facilities.
Virginia’s new large-load rate class and Georgia’s explicit risk-transfer rules show how hyperscale growth is being reshaped toward more structured, financially responsible
Prince George's County leaders and advocates urge responsible development of data centers, prioritizing community well-being and environmental protection.
Todd Thomas, best-selling author of the Unleashing Abundant Energy trilogy and founder of climate-tech company Woodchuck.ai, today announced the release of his latest book, Hyperscale: AI, Data Centers,
More than a dozen speakers sounded off on data centers during Tuesday’s public hearing at the Birmingham City Council. After watching the uproar caused by the recent approval of a $14 billion, 18-building hyperscale data center campus on 700 acres in Bessemer,