Google Just Put an AI in Charge of Keeping Its Data Centers Cool (zdnet.com) 83
Google is putting an artificial intelligence system in charge of its data center cooling after the system proved it could cut energy use. From a report: Now Google and its AI company DeepMind are taking the project further; instead of recommendations being implemented by human staff, the AI system is directly controlling cooling in the data centers that run services including Google Search, Gmail and YouTube. "This first-of-its-kind cloud-based control system is now safely delivering energy savings in multiple Google data centers," Google said. Data centers use vast amount of energy and as the demand for cloud computing rises even small tweaks to areas like cooling can produce significant time and cost savings. Google's decision to use its own DeepMind-created system is also a good plug for its AI business. Every five minutes, the AI pulls a snapshot of the data center cooling system from thousands of sensors. This data is fed into deep neural networks, which predict how different choices will affect future energy consumption.
I have an AI at home, too (Score:5, Funny)
It's called a THERMOSTAT
and no, it's not connected to the internet.
Re: I have an AI at home, too (Score:4, Funny)
humans emit heat...
Bzzzt!
I'm sorry Dave,
you must stay at room temperature,
for the good of the Servers.
Dave ?
Dave ?
Thermostats vs an actual solution (Score:3)
You set upper and lower bounds ad the thermostat engages heat or AC if the ambient temperature goes outside the set limits. I fail to see what AI adds to this.
I take it your thermostat doesn't route job orders in a large cluster to avoid sending work to hot cabinets?
Only controlling the A/C doesn't sound so useful to me. At least if I'm trying to optimize for most processing done per unit of electricity.
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No but it wouldn't be rocket science to make the temperature available to whatever software is routing jobs. You have been able to send jobs to lightly loaded hosts, cluster members, what-have-you, for a long time. Adding the cabinet temper
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Downside: See the other Slashdot article about how Amazon is gaming the electrical grid to divert the cost of running their data centers onto the poor schlubs who live near them.
I think the articles are related because electricity costs is such a huge factor for cloud computing. You can try and use less energy, or you can try and make someone else pay your bills.
I suspect it will quickly be cheaper for the cloud industry to outsource all the datacenters outside of the US and EU to places with cheap electricity and little to no government regulation. Then all you need to do is lay some fat network, much cheaper than a power generator, and use smaller front-end server to help hide so
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There are privacy regulations and law that relate to the security of personal data across networks and the location of servers.
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In the US? laws were made to be broken, or overturned by bought politicians. Maybe applicable in the EU.
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"The more they overthink the plumbing, the easier it is to stop up the drain." - Scotty (Star Trek 3)
FTFY
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"All I can say is, they don't make 'em like they used to." - Scotty (Star Trek 5)
?
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I assume that's exactly what they did.
If some areas could be a couple degrees warmer ambient, and it doesn't mess up any of the internal sensors heat, the AI let is slide.
It can be response to subtle changes in a way that a person or traditional temperature settings couldn't be.
Additionally, it can likely move the physical location of cloud things predicatively in a way that would be hard for humans (I assume this counts as part of temperature control), or maybe keep an area with more things running if if m
Re: I have an AI at home, too (Score:2)
...an AI
One would almost think the writer was quoting Gibson except this is ZDNet so literacy is quite ruled out.
The data center became self-aware (Score:4, Insightful)
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Data centers are basically industrial buildings, so optimizing their layouts and location considering cooling, costs of building, and in generally optimizing in terms of functional inputs and outputs of the facility considering all relevant parties is just a data collection issue these days. That building optimization was done by hand in the 70's, so maybe a neural net in combination of other modules could perform such a feat in scale today, if put together in the right way. Combinations of systems have bee
The Real Thing (Score:1)
Controlling heat dissipation in Google Data Centers and keep them cool it's a far greater responsibility than winning a Dota 2 game.
Good bye, datacenter staff. (Score:1)
I never liked you.
Next up: DevOps. I don't like you either.
Really? (Score:5, Funny)
a cheaper solution (Score:5, Funny)
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Just let about a dozen cats loose in the building and they'll automatically find the warmest spots to snuggle up and take a nap on. Then you add more fans or whatever to that area. That costs basically nothing
You've not met my cats!!!! Vet bills are not free!
and cats are provably smarter than AI.
You've not met my cats!!!
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The older I get, the more I interact with cats, and the more examples I see of cats behaving erratically in response to various forms of stimuli (e.g. putting tape on their backs or sides, using a clip on the nape of their neck, their reaction to stationary cucumbers, etc.), the more convinced I become that cats are actually incredibly dumb. What we interpret as aloofness is actually just their inability to comprehend what's going on using a brain that amounts to little more than randomly-firing neurons.
Min
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Our cats would seek out the laptop keyboards, behind a desktop PC, on a hot water bottle and any chair that someone had just been sitting on.
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Just let about a dozen cats loose in the building
Cats? [wikipedia.org]
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Every stupid demented thing is "AI" these days, because too many people believe in magic....
100% efficiency (Score:1)
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Cool? (Score:2)
What's the Megafonzie rating of the AI?
You mean algorithm? (Score:4, Insightful)
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An algorithm would be an explicit sequence of steps for a computer to perform, typically designed and written for it by a human programmer.
This system, on the other hand, was never handed a program to run to figure out how to best keep energy costs down -- instead it was given example data and a learning algorithm, and applied the latter to the former to generate a useful neural network.
But the neural network itself is not an algorithm, except in an uninteresting academic sense, because it was not explicitl
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Look, the word "software" has fallen out of favour in 2018 - it's now either an app or an AI.
This clearly isn't an app, so...
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Seriously - it's an algorithm.
No it's not. It is actually the exact opposite.
How is this AI? (Score:1)
if (temp_sensor > some_value) { turnACOn(); }
How is this any different than how my computer controls its internal fans ? Ok, maybe over time, the system "learns" how to be a PID controller by knowing how it overreacted the last time a particular sensor was a particular value and eventually eliminates any kind of "rippling" effect.
But this is not AI. Stop calling it AI. Fucking marketing wanks
about the only type of job AI is good for (Score:2)
So the worry-wart slashdotter was right, "A"I put thousands out of work. Thousands of older model thermostats, haha.
Of course anything this "deep think" AI is doing could have been done 60+ years ago with an analog computer, you tards know that right?
I for one find it... (Score:3)
Cool!
Things worked fine until... (Score:2)
Comment (Score:2)
Pffft. That's nothing. In 2014 I started using an AI to control my services. They call it... systemd!
now THATs smart (Score:2)
if (temp(x)> 26) then ( ac.run(1) )
while
Let's throw in a Google Home to make it look cool and trendy.....
Butter robot (Score:2)
I feel sorry for this AI that's its purpose for existing is to run the A/C for a data center. I'm reminded of the Butter Robot from Rick and Morty.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X7HmltUWXgs [youtube.com]
Is this a bad idea? (Score:1)
I wonder if Google could save more money by building data centers in the arctic.