this post was submitted on 23 Sep 2024
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I mean, it ran until 2019 when it was shut down because it wasn't profitable. That's a pretty good track record.
"it" did not, an adjacent unit did.
Peak AI shit where they think reopening an unprofitable nuke plant is gonna help AI somehow be profitable.
In particular, that they signed a 20-year-long deal. I'm guessing that gets them lower prices, and it is Microsoft, so I would expect them to weasel out of that contract somehow. But still just wild to me that they would even consider such a long-running contract for technology that's been around for barely a fraction of that.
Machine Learning tech has been around for decades. It just became sorta a little bit useful (outside of super specialized uses like photo post-processing or chess engines) around 2017 or so, and since then has exploded in capability, at a speed that the public is kind of incapable of comprehending.
It went from the approximate intelligence of a toddler to a smart high schooler in about 4.5 years, in the last 1.5 years it has nearly reached the level of a STEM PHD in several areas, if the latest whitepapers are to be trusted. And of course it's been much faster than us at reading, interpreting context and summarizing information accurately for a couple years as well.
DeepMind cracked the Protein Folding problem, and that's old news.
I honestly don't think people are ready for how fast AI has been improving.
Even if the AI bubble pops spectacularly and Microsoft aren't training any new models in two years, Microsoft still have massive datacentres that need to compute loads of things, and loads of things they'd like to compute, but don't because they don't have the capacity, but might end up doing if they're suddenly not training AI models on lots of machines. Having free electricity for twenty years is useful for a tech company with or without AI, and nuclear is a good way to get back on track for being carbon neutral soonish like they were going to be before all the recent AI stuff.