Versuchen GOLD - Frei
Going neuro down in data centros
PC Pro
|July 2025
The idea of processors acting like brains is as old as computers, but when it comes to energy efficiency they have a long way to go
I've written many sceptical words about AI in this column, railing against overconfidence and hype, hubristic pursuit of AGI, deepfakery and content pillage. Nevertheless I do believe that AI - once we've civilised it - is going to be hugely important to science, economics, robotics, control systems, transport and everyday life. This assumes that, through political will, public concern about misinformation, invasion of privacy and theft of artistic data can be regulated away. Even then, one colossal stumbling block will remain: energy consumption.
When AI firms consider purchasing mothballed nuclear reactors to power their compute-servers, the absurdity of AI's current direction ought to be visible to everyone.
Current GPT-based AI systems depend on supercomputers that can execute quintillions of simple tensor arithmetic operations per second to compare multiple layers of vast matrices holding encoded parameters.
Currently all this grunt is supplied using the same CMOS semiconductor process technologies that gave us the PC, the smartphone and computer games - the Nvidia chips that drive most AI servers are descendants of those originally developed for 3D games. The latest state-of-the-art GPUs have a watts/cm² power density around the same as an electric hob, and the power consumption of AI server farms scales exponentially to the square of the number employed (order O(N²) in complexity theory jargon).
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der July 2025-Ausgabe von PC Pro.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON PC Pro
PC Pro
Investors may still believe in Elon Musk, but Jon Honeyball isn't buying any of it
My day started badly. Still bleary-eyed at 6am, with a bucket of coffee sitting untouched beside me, I dropped the SIM-removal tool into my keyboard.
3 mins
April 2026
PC Pro
Green cloud
Don't entrust your jobs to dirty, energy-hungry servers:
2 mins
April 2026
PC Pro
"I've said it before, and I'll say it again: the biggest obstacle to security is inconvenience"
Have you seen those password books on Amazon? They're not a cybersecurity abomination, despite what you may think
7 mins
April 2026
PC Pro
"Cyber resilience is now treated as a matter of governance rather than pure technical compliance"
Rule Britannia, Britannia waives the rules... or why the shoulder-shrugging Cyber Security and Resilience Bill causes such problems for UK businesses
6 mins
April 2026
PC Pro
"Not to point any fingers here; I seriously doubt the fault lies with our esteemed editor"
Whether it's PDFs from PC Pro's editor, Outlook messages or his partner's photos, space is at a premium for Steve this month
9 mins
April 2026
PC Pro
"It's a pity there's an Elon-shaped issue with Starlink because the solution is otherwise superb"
The best-connected man in Huntingdon ensures his lab will be always online, takes a nibble at Apple and wonders why Dell will take half a year to deliver a new laptop
10 mins
April 2026
PC Pro
Are we building too many data centres - and could we build them better?
The AI arms race has sparked a rush to build data centres, but we should use them to offer free heating and other benefits rather than big boxes that will go out of date too fast
8 mins
April 2026
PC Pro
IT'S EASY WITH AN eSIM
After more than three decades, the physical SIM card is on its way out. Darien Graham-Smith finds out why we should all welcome the change
8 mins
April 2026
PC Pro
Pippin awful: Apple's doomed console
David Crookes reflects on Apple's ill-judged attempt to corner the gaming market with the Apple Pippin
9 mins
April 2026
PC Pro
AI & DEV TEAMS The start of a beautiful friendship
Are real-life programmers living on borrowed time? Nik Rawlinson explores the growing popularity of AI-powered development
9 mins
April 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
