The information is very difficult to consume, if I found this on a google search result I’d immediately close the page without reading. It is neat that Fable can design something like this, but the better question is should you actually use a design like this.
Obviously water is renewable, but the constraint here is finite public water system capacity. When that capacity is allocated to data centers less is available for other community needs. See https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.02705
They have a similar money printer to Google, it isn't surprising they're just throwing money at anything they can to see what sticks. Almost like a modern Bell Labs
Optical cables have gotten very good and cheap recently. I was able to move my desktop into another room and run outputs / usbs to both my office and tv for under $100.
I think the most important thing is letting the users know what the site is before making an account. For example even with all of the pushes from Meta to mandate accounts, they still let you browse their platforms for a few minutes before nudging you to make an account.
> The information accessed was limited to standard business contact information and related customer relationship management (CRM) data, including customer names, phone numbers, email addresses, and physical addresses, as well as support case data and sales-related data.
> There's a mass delusion in the industry that you need Kubernetes to run a serious production service. You don't. At StatusDude, we serve thousands of monitoring checks per minute, run multi-region workers, and deploy multiple times a day
This is pretty small scale, Kubernetes comes in when you've got a larger workload.
This is a useful feature for finding out if your coworkers are in the office if the environment is hybrid. Companies don't need this feature to go big brother on employees, they have badge logs and network logs for that already.
So this is just a page to collect email addresses and you'll build the product if you get any?