@MarsGenStores@otokyo They were in libraries. If you found a set before 1965 it could teach you how to make nitroglycerin. Who needed a cookbook from idiots.
With the workshop gone, the area around our building site gets a lot more sunlight and a few native plants have appeared here we hadn't noticed before, including this Climbing Prairie Rose. Now, that it’s blooming again, hopefully it will also give us rose hips later in the year.
🚨 LMAO!! President Trump just dropped this absolute GEM: He's filling the newly improved Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool with leftist tears
Straight from the source 🤣🤣
📽️ @TheRicanMemes
I wonder who at The White House might be able to make this happen? This man has earned it, and what a GREAT thing he's doing for people in need around America! This is what "Love Thy Neighbor" is all about🇺🇸
@Grunt2A We’ll they are magnetic. So, use your judgement. The odds of you being able to get to a firearm while you are stuck in a tube with your arms pinned are slim. Just leave it with your phone and shoes.
@ChrisMartzWX Well all I know is in the mid 2000s we hit 111 on the day of a wedding I attended in Nashville. Can’t say to reliably of the data but it was recorded. The wedding was outside.
An Ohio fire department is warning that AI data centers are quickly becoming a full-time job for first responders.
In Jerome Township, northwest of Columbus, emergency crews have been called to two Amazon data centers a staggering 84 times in just four years. Since the first facility opened in 2021, firefighters have responded to dozens of incidents, averaging about two calls per month.
Then came the major fire.
In April, a two-alarm blaze at one of the sites caused more than $50 million in damage and tied up emergency crews for over 24 hours.
Local officials aren’t just worried about the fires themselves. They’re concerned that precious emergency resources are being repeatedly diverted to these massive industrial complexes, all at taxpayer expense.
Data centers are sprouting up across America as tech companies scramble to build the massive infrastructure needed to power artificial intelligence. These facilities house thousands of servers that run nonstop, consuming vast amounts of electricity and generating intense heat that requires constant cooling.
While data center fires remain relatively rare, they can be exceptionally challenging to fight. The buildings are packed with electrical systems, battery backups, complex cooling infrastructure, and high-security zones that often hinder emergency access.
Ohio has emerged as one of the nation’s fastest-growing data center hubs, with more than 170 facilities already operating and many more under construction or in planning.
This growth mirrors a global explosion in hyperscale data centers, driven by the skyrocketing demand for AI computing power. Every response, AI image, or large language model ultimately relies on physical servers somewhere in the world.
While these facilities bring jobs and economic investment, many communities are feeling the strain, on power grids, water supplies, roads, and now, local emergency services.