Living in the clouds?

I note the author tries to raise the tone toward the end, but I have little faith anything will be done in anything like a timely manner:

@CodaCoder, I read the whole original paper at …

Nice stuff if you are an anthropologist like me …

At one point Steven Gonzalez Monserrate (he’s on Twitter) observes …

The Cloud may be a carbonivore, but as the example of “The Mouth” shows, the Cloud is also quite thirsty. Like a pasture, server farms are irrigated. In many data centers today, chilled water is piped through the latticework of server racks to more efficiently cool the facility, liquid being a superior convective agent than air. This shift from cooling air to cooling water is an attempt to reduce carbon footprint, but it comes at a cost.