SpaceX wants to build AI data centers in space. Will it work?

https://www.sciencedaily.com/images/1920/spacecraft-satellite-orbiting-earth.webp

Imagine if one company could become the railroad, electric utility and cloud-computing provider of the emerging space economy. That potential fueled excitement around the long-anticipated initial public offering of SpaceX. Investors are not simply betting on rockets anymore. They are betting on an entire orbital ecosystem.

Among the most ambitious and challenging ideas riding this wave of enthusiasm is something that sounds almost like science fiction: orbital data centers. SpaceX may be one of the most well-known companies seeking to build them, but it is not the only one.

The logic is seductive: Launch the data centers into orbit, where solar energy is abundant and land, water and local power grids are no longer constraints. As artificial intelligence drives an explosion in computing demand, companies are pitching orbital data centers as a way to escape the growing environmental and infrastructure pressures of Earth-based computing. Data centers often...

Copyright of this story solely belongs to sciencedaily.com. To see the full text click HERE

Read more

https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/txXZ8gzz5JKNnRLQotqvz9-1920-80.jpg

I put the Mac mini-sized Kensington SD5010T5 EQ to the test and discovered a fully featured Thunderbolt 5 docking station that doesn’t take up much desk space

Its dual native HDMI ports alongside downstream Thunderbolt 5 architecture eliminate messy legacy adapter chains, making it an elite choice for multi-display setups. However, its immense bandwidth capacity remains heavily bottlenecked by a market still playing catch-up on compatible host devices. Pros * +Massive 140W host charging over a single cable