I have to say, this looks good on Blackrock and Brookfield - Huge datacenter not going to be built.

I'm personally routing for Brookfield to wise up because they're all in on an LLM DC within a few miles of me. That last sentence gives me hope too.

Does this qualify as one of the horsemen??

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/general/largest-data-center-project-ever-proposed-is-officially-dead/ar-AA27d7GV

"The largest data center project ever proposed in the U.S. is officially dead.

Blackstone-owned QTS Realty Trust withdrew its appeal to the Virginia Supreme Court on July 2, closing out a three-year legal fight over the Prince William Digital Gateway, a planned 2,100-acre campus in Prince William County, Virginia that would have packed 37 buildings and 22 million square feet of data centers next to Manassas National Battlefield Park. At full build-out, the project carried an estimated $100 billion price tag and would have been the largest data center complex in the world.

QTS was the last developer standing. Co-developer Compass Datacenters, backed by Brookfield, dropped its own appeal in April, and the Prince William Board of County Supervisors withdrew from the litigation the same month after spending nearly $2 million in taxpayer funds defending the original rezoning. That approval, granted in 2023, was voided by the Virginia Court of Appeals in March, which found the county's public notice for the rezoning hearing fell short of the state's six-day spacing requirement between newspaper notices.

In its withdrawal filing, QTS said the project had "advanced through years of planning, analysis, and public review" and would have delivered tens of billions of dollars in capital investment and thousands of jobs to the county. The company added that Virginia remains central to its business, pointing to $5 billion in ongoing investment in the Richmond region on top of its existing Northern Virginia footprint.

The retreat comes days after Blackstone agreed to hand Digital Realty full ownership of three built-and-leased Northern Virginia data centers valued at $7.8 billion, in a $3.5 billion cash-and-stock deal. That transaction extends an existing joint venture rather than an exit, but the timing puts fresh attention on how Blackstone is managing its data center bets in the state that hosts more capacity than anywhere else in the world.

Northern Virginia remains the industry's biggest hub, and the region's buildout keeps running into local resistance over land, water and grid strain. Several states have floated moratoriums or tighter permitting rules as utilities warn that data centers are driving an outsized share of new electricity demand, and grid operators in some regions have started asking developers to bring their own power generation rather than compete for scarce capacity. A Gallup survey released in May found 71% of Americans oppose data center construction in their area, with 48% strongly opposed, running higher than opposition to a local nuclear plant.

For Blackstone, the Digital Gateway collapse doesn't change the broader trajectory. The firm still manages a data center portfolio worth more than $150 billion globally, and in May it raised $1.75 billion taking its acquisition vehicle, Blackstone Digital Infrastructure Trust, public on the NYSE, to keep buying already-built, leased facilities tied to AI demand. What the Prince William outcome shows is that even the biggest players in the space can lose a fight over land use once local opposition organizes and the legal process runs its course."

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u/stormica — 19 hours ago

Can’t hit gauge, 4 swatches and 8 years later

>Pattern: Throttle Moto Jacket - Amy Gunderson https://www.interweave.com/product/throttle-moto-jacket-knitting-pattern-download/

>Yarn (as from the pattern): Universal Yarn Deluxe DK Tweed Superwash (90% superwash wool, 7% acrylic, 3% viscose; 284 yd [259 m]/3½ oz [100 g])

>Needles: Sizes 4 (3.5 mm) and 7 (4.5 mm) Adjust needle size if necessary to obtain the correct gauge.
Gauge**:** 20 sts and 34 rows = 4" in Striped Linen Stitch on larger needles.

>Difficulty: Experienced

My skill level: Intermediate? Knitting since 2014ish. I can do cables, lace, etc. Working from vague patterns is often not a problem. Have made several garments and can usually adjust to hit stitch gauge if not row gauge and compensate for row gauge in the pattern. Have drafted my own not terribly complex patterns. Medium to tight knitter. Getting looser as time goes on with experience and my hands just can’t hold the yarn as tightly. Can teach concepts to already begun knitters and have coached a couple of beginner knitters.

I’ve tried this pattern off and on since it was published in 2018. I cannot hit gauge. I can’t even come close.

Previously washed, dried and measured swatches showed very little change in the dimensions from the unwashed swatch (like maybe in the range of 1/2 stitch for 4”) when simply blocked to shape; no stretching at all other than to straighten.

This latest is my 4th and most comprehensive try to date. (Started Oct 2025 and put in time out in Dec) It has gone beyond UFO to become my project of shame. I am up 3 needle sizes (7 and 10) and off by nearly 2” at 14”. So where the arm was supposed to be 14.125” at its widest part, my “swatch” is 12.25”. The fabric is also not as firm as I thought it would be though still within an acceptable hand. I’m not on Ravelry but someone checked for me and one comment was that they went up to an 8. I’m assuming that’s for the largest needle size.

I have had 2 people with more experience than me say:

  • It’s linen stitch, it’s a challenging stitch for gauge. It’ll probably be fine.
  • You should be able to block to dimensions with the way the fabric feels. Just go for it.

The yarn is superwash so it may well grow from here too.. but knitting this whole thing, seaming and sewing it together to find out it’s way too small would be soul crushing after trying for so long to make it.

I could potentially go up 2 sizes to get the dimensions needed based on the extra 2” needed but… 3 needle sizes and still up 2 garment sizes seems … excessive?

Could I be missing something else? I could in theory re-draft it but that seems like a step further than I may want to go after 8 years of this?

tldr; Intermediate level knitter can’t hit gauge and can’t decide if I need to :

  • go up another half dozen needle sizes (slightly facetious), and might not like the fabric or
  • go up a couple of garment sizes or
  • say that perhaps this designer and I have a fundamental gauge mismatch and call the yarn investment a learning experience?
u/stormica — 8 days ago

(Canada) Carney Unveils National AI plan - including "megacomputer" and opportunities for the government to invest in AI companies.

F.M.L. I wonder how long until my home is worthless if they keep pushing the Alberta advantage for these chatbot datacenters. (As posted in other threads, I live at the center of a radius of up to 7 (but likely 6 and one misplaced on the map) proposed projects.)

https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/carney-ai-strategy-9.7223236

From the article:

"As for scaling up top Canadian companies, the federal government is establishing a $500-million Canadian Tech Growth Fund, which would provide flexible capital and investment support and allow Ottawa to take equity stakes in "the most promising Canadian AI firms.""

"Ottawa plans to build a world-leading public supercomputer, according to the strategy, meant to give Canadian researchers and SMEs access to compute for "cutting-edge public and industry-driven innovation.""

ETA: OK, I don't know where I got megacomputer. Supercomputer. Supercomputer!

u/stormica — 1 month ago

Spa Day on soft basic well water, septic on acreage in Canada

Ooof. There's a mouthful. Something in our soft water (PH8.4 ish?) seems to make whites dingy really fast. Bleach didn't help much so I'm turning to a spa day after almost 2 years in this house and my whites turning ever more grey. Edit: PH is 8.8. I'm still looking for softness.

Our well water is soft - I can't recall how soft but could possibly look it up if needed. It's alkaline already. Enough so that when I dye or wash wool, I use RO water or correct with citric acid or I lose dye.

Unscented Tide powder is challenging to find here so I have a bottle of the liquid Free and Gentle to try this process out. Unscented is a must. I have ammonia for the after wash and Oxyclean, Soda Ash, Borax, Orvus Paste. So all sorts of cleaning products except enzymes other than what's in the Tide.

Except that I sort of do have enzymes but I don't know which ones. I have and love this product here that's local (to the province) and I use it on everything in the house. The filth it cleaned when we moved in was soil and oil based so I -think- it should have a lipase of sorts in it? https://www.ez-clean.com/. I'm not finding a lot of info on what's in it - even in the MSDS as it's a "trade secret". Is it worth a try?

Regular detergent is Kirkland Free and Clear.

So I'm thinking:

Spa day wash:

Tide and possibly Ez-Clean and Oxy? This will smell bad (the scent of oxyclean really puts my stomach off) so I'll try to put it in the garage.

Then the after wash, Tide and Ammonia.

Does this sound OK or should I sub out something else? Was hoping to get started this week and not order anything else if possible.

Does the septic or well water part of this change any products or dosages here?

ETA: Thank you for any guidance!

u/stormica — 1 month ago

At what point do we stop updating (especially but not exclusively opensource / github hosted) software?

https://mastodon.gamedev.place/@JeremiahFieldhaven/116654345332213390 and also: https://itsfoss.com/news/vim-classic-first-release/

These are 2 links that showed up in my feeds tonight and they have me pondering if I already have the safest version of a lot of my software for the currently foreseeable future especially on my mission critical machines.

So, if I don't want to have to troubleshoot potentially sloppy / insecure / buggy commits from Claude, I would be removing vim and installing vim classic and keeping rsync back at 3.4.1 on my Linux machines.

Now I'm wondering what I tell my more security paranoid IT clients going forward? If I don't want to update, what do I tell them? Am I just having one of those "hopeless" nights that's bound to turn into a doom-scroll night or is this valid? Are we going to reach a point where software gets more "dangerous" to update than to not? Have we already reached that point to some degree? Is... that a feature not a bug?

(I'm a mostly retired Sys Admin with still a few SOHO desktop support clients left, so I haven't been keeping up completely with the server side stuff. These just made me sit up and think tonight)

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u/stormica — 1 month ago