I don’t know what you’re referring to exactly about the economy crashing, other 
than the typical doom-and-gloom nonsense that the right-wing propaganda 
machinery floods the airwaves with whenever Democrats are in charge of things. 
The truth is, things are always shifting, slowly but surely.

As for technology, I’d make this simple observation:

At some point, the world leader in CPU chips — Intel — was following along the 
same path they had been taking for years and was working on a 5 GHz CPU when 
they realized that as they kept trying to speed-up CPUs, the amount of effort 
needed to extract the heat from the chips would make the hardware far too 
expensive and cumbersome to remain viable. So they decided that multiple CPUs 
on the chip where the CPU speed was around 2-3 GHz would be better in the 
long-run. 

I’m guessing that the folks at a world leader in computer engineering — Apple 
Computer — also figured this out. Intel sells chips; Apple sells computer 
systems. Dell buys Intel chips and integrates video cards from another vendor 
that use Intel’s GPUs. Apple doesn’t really care who makes what; they just want 
to maximize their profits.

Coincidentally, video cards have been hard to come by because the GPUs have 
been getting hijacked for use by crytocurrency miners. A large portion of these 
have Intel GPUs on them.

Apple decided it might make more sense to simply put a bunch of CPUs and GPUs 
on one substrate and then tune their software to run on this sort of 
architecture, alleviating the dependency on separate CPU and GPU chips and 
cards. There’s a side-effect in that nobody is going to be hijacking their GPUs 
for other purposes.

Intel apparently didn’t want to lose the revenues they’ve been earning from 
their GPU chip sales to crypto miners and, well, Apple is no longer using 
either Intel’s CPUs or GPUs.

So while some say the economy is “crashing”, the 10 largest corporations in the 
world are all reporting record profits and growth. The stuff politicians are 
doing to continue long-term policies that enable corporations to siphon off 
more and more money from consumers is appalling, and may well lead to a lot 
more discomfort and pain for consumers, but certainly not from corporate 
shareholders and execs. If you want to profit from that shift, then buy stocks 
in these large and growing companies. Warren Buffet has large holdings in them, 
as well as Apple. He also owns a large utility company in Nevada.

Speaking of utility companies, one thing that is surely going to help “crash” 
the economy (for consumers) over the coming decade is the increasing growth of 
EVs and their need to get their fuel from the power grid. The same power grid 
that’s going to be used to power computers and crypto miners. Some with 
politically-motivated arguments might see it as convenient that states like 
Arizona have passed laws that give utility companies the power to punish 
consumers who want to install their own renewable energy sources and batteries 
to become independent of the power grid. Yes, we’re talking about those folks 
who’d like to unhook from the inevitable increases we’re going to see in the 
cost of electricity, especially since the cost of fuel to power generators is 
also skyrocketing — and the profits from those price increases is nearly all 
flowing into the bank accounts of the monarchy of Saudi Arabia (with the help 
of elected officials in Congress, both past and present, members of both 
political parties).

The tea leaves are pretty clear to many readers: there’s a big shift towards 
more and more things in our life that require electricity to run, and it’s 
inevitable that the cost of said power is going to go up. But the price of gas 
is also going up, which is contributing to the increase in power costs. Buying 
a bunch of old computers that consume 3x the power of the newest computers does 
not seem like a smart way to avoid increases in the cost of electricity.

Make your home more thermally efficient so you don’t need to run your A/C as 
much. Replace electronic equipment with newer lower-power stuff. Reduce your 
overall carbon footprint by 10%. Grow your own fruits and veggies. Set up a 
wind turbine or solar panels to charge batteries that power your electronic 
equipment at home, but do not connect them to the grid. Buy an inexpensive EV 
to get around town, because in the long-run it’ll be far cheaper than a 
gas-powered vehicle. (I recommend a Bolt or a Leaf as they’re the cheapest EVs 
on the market today and will remain so for 2-3 years due to factors like the 
global chip shortage. I got a 2019 Leaf SL Plus, and I *LOVE* it! It only costs 
me 4¢/mile in electricity to drive.)

While you’re at it, figure out how to generate $100-$200 per day online to 
supplement your income. 

-David Schwartz




> On Aug 15, 2022, at 9:31 AM, Keith Smith via PLUG-discuss 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Hi,
> About 24 years ago I worked for a guy who used to say "There is opportunity 
> in chaos.".
> 
> Given the chip shortage and other things taking place in the global space, 
> present and future, I am wondering what do you see as opportunity in this 
> present/coming chaos?
> 
> FWIW I am an old guy who has started to realize that being forward thinking 
> is VERY important.
> 
> To keep things relevant I see that hardware is finally powerful enough that 
> 10 year old hardware can run Linux rather well.  If the economy really is 
> going to crash it might be worth acquiring some old iron, SSD drives, and RAM 
> for future projects.
> 
> Your thoughts?
> 
> Thanks!!
> ---------------------------------------------------
> PLUG-discuss mailing list - [email protected]
> To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings:
> https://lists.phxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss

---------------------------------------------------
PLUG-discuss mailing list - [email protected]
To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings:
https://lists.phxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss

Reply via email to