h a l f b a k e r yIf ever there was a time we needed a bowlologist, it's now.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
As server farms grow increasingly larger, the logistics of running them become problematic. Generation of and removal of waste heat, providing power, etc.
So, utilizing complex communication arrays, to maintain vast channels of data transfer to these mega-satellites from earth, we co-locate our processing
needs to server farms in near earth orbit.
Solar panels, working in conjunction with massive battery systems, generate the necessary power, waste heat is vented to outer space, and the computers are serviced by robot technicians controlled from earth.
IKECE
IKECE Optimizing radiation. [bungston, Sep 22 2008]
I wonder how much per pound costs are in microgravity
Near_20Earth_20Orbi...ation_20Corporation [normzone, Sep 22 2008]
Please log in.
If you're not logged in,
you can see what this page
looks like, but you will
not be able to add anything.
Annotation:
|
|
We have Prior Art on this. [+] |
|
|
8th is the robot technician. |
|
|
NEO ? got something against geo-synchronous ? [+] anyways for the near-future opportunity to say "with frikken com-lasers on their heads" at some point. |
|
|
How are you going to vent waste heat to outer space? This is not a trivial problem. Space is a great insulator. You must radiate it away somehow. Check out the IKECE idea for more on this than you ever wanted to know. |
|
|
Your processors will probably have to be radiation-hardened. |
|
|
Also, due to the cost of getting things in orbit, let alone astronauts, your hardware must need no maintenance. Failure is not an option. |
|
|
Actually Bungston, space (contrary to popular belief) is not a perfect vacuum, and any object left in space, that is then left to collide with those few molecules will conduct quite a bit of heat. This is what the ISS does. |
|
|
With a proper heating/cooling system, this could work fine. Computers are also more forgiving than people in the temperature range they can safely operate in. |
|
|
Would this really be a better alternative to having a server farm on Earth? Couldn't we just place it in Antarctica? Plenty of room there. |
|
|
I just saw this in the news, but I can't find a link now. I'll keep looking. I thought it was another Google patent like the server farms at sea thing. |
|
|
Give it also the ability to fire missiles from orbit and you then have the coolest rocket launching solar powered orbital data farm off earth, in fact, it would then be able to take on google... [+] |
|
|
First, I don't get it...second it has too many moving parts...third, everthing in this filed of dreams has already been invented. |
|
|
//Check out the IKECE idea // Hah! I knew within the first four paragraphs that it had to be one of [Vernon]'s |
|
|
Found this while doing a prior art search for an interesting variation (also verging on the halfbaked, but a few orders of magnitude cheaper). Craenor, contact me through my website: ( www.keithl.com ) |
|
| |