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GPUs have been in high demand since cryptocurrency became a thing? Are you saying that something built for AI can't be used for other workloads?


This strikes me as a combination of semantics and false equivalence. You might as well argue that a new crowd of people illegally dirt-biking in a public park isn’t a meaningful change because people with baby strollers are have also technically been violating the “no vehicles” sign for years.


Not nearly with this density and power.

The power an "AI data center uses" in a single rack used to be, or is still in many cases, the power draw of an entire room or even floor.

Going from a few megawatts to ~10GW.


Did crypto workload ever take over an entire data center?


Yes.

https://www.riotplatforms.com/bitcoin-mining/corsicana/

> Riot Platforms has initiated a large-scale, 1 gigawatt development to expand its Bitcoin mining and hosting capabilities in Navarro County, Texas with its new Corsicana Facility.

> Development of the Corsicana Facility has begun with an initial 400 megawatts of capacity on a 265-acre site. The substation was energized in April 2024 and mining operations have begun.

https://comptroller.texas.gov/economy/fiscal-notes/archive/2...

> In 2008, the city of Rockdale lost about 80 percent of its workforce following the closure of the Alcoa steel plant. Today, the old Alcoa plant is occupied by Riot Blockchain’s Whinstone facility, believed to be the largest single Bitcoin mining operation in North America. As an industry that relies on high levels of electricity, the company was drawn to the facility due to its existing power infrastructure, including valuable high-voltage transmission lines and large substations.


Bitcoin Mining is 138–205 TWh annually. Surely that's more than a few data centers.




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