UPDATE: Debris from the 28 May 2026 anomaly could wash ashore along publicly accessible areas over the coming days or weeks, report debris to 911. Launch vehicle debris is potentially hazardous, direct contact poses a risk to personal health and welfare.
https://t.co/LAvUsRdK4H
@MatthewCappucci@FlynnJansenWX Places that have intense tornadoes more frequently usually have better warning criterias also helps to not have massive radar holes for some wfos
We are in the scary photo stage of the anti-data center hysteria.
The more I look at the subject, the more I see the cross over between the climate change activists and the anti-data center crowd.
Here is the follow on.
For the 40,000 acre site, lets assume its a solar farm.
@grok, what is the waste heat, in gigawatts, from a solar farm that covers a 40,000 acre site in Box Elder County Utah assuming standard solar panels, and 100% coverage? How much is that same thermal load in TeraJoules?
I don’t know why data centers have become this generations nuclear power.
Unlike nuclear power, there is a 0% chance that a data center can lead to any sort of disaster scenario.
This project in Utah is:
- in an uninhabited area
- bought and repurposed water already in use
- is bringing its own power, so it won’t cost citizens anything
It’s like being against building a nuclear power plant in the middle of Nevada, except there is no radioactive waste. No fall out. No risk of anything.
It’s a big computer in the middle of nowhere, that is self sufficient in all resources.
There are a million real problems in America.
Data centers just aren’t one.
@twistedsentrywx@JordanHallWX Firefighting is something I've always wanted to do I got a degree in cyber security and can't find anything in it and can't stand sitting at a desk all day. Thank you for info !
it’s always “are you autistic” and never “thanks for showing me the large day 4 30% severe weather risk over the central plains even thought I didn’t ask”