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Topic: We'd love board feedback on our concept: Combined Heating and Computation - page 3. (Read 6847 times)

newbie
Activity: 25
Merit: 0
In it's simplest form, yes. Pretty much. The difference being the thermal energy is stored and available for use on demand. Goodbye furnace, AC unit, etc.

There could be some cool applications for gamers as well.
legendary
Activity: 4242
Merit: 8515
'The right to privacy matters'
okay I see the idea. have a bunch of miners cooled by a liquid cooling system.

once a radiator  of coolant reaches a certain temp. it pumps that hot liquid into a thermos. then the heated liquid is used to run a electrical power source.

you use the setup to save on power costs. Has potential but it needs to be fully developed now. Mining is being taken over by large companies in countries like China power subsidies are  already in place.
newbie
Activity: 25
Merit: 0
Hello Bitcoin/Crypto Currency world!
 
First time listener, first time caller...first....timer.  

I'll be as brief as possible. I am a part of a team that has developed a prototype machine that essentially captures, stores, and when necessary, distributes the waste heat generated from high capacity computing. The prototype and the concept is mostly being pushed out over Energy Efficiency related networks. The idea is that the computational load across a larger distributed network essentially becomes the "fuel" to keep the components hot and transferring heat. There's also local computational demand, so theoretically, the device could control anything in your house with a CPU or GPU. Globally, the collective computational power could be tapped by you, or third parties for whatever it's needed for - advanced math, research, whatever.
 
Although we have some members of our team that are mining and active in the crypto currency space, we thought it was time to start engaging the Bitcoin community and the crypto currency community at large as well.
 
In a nutshell, the system is a node in a larger distributed network that is sending high capacity computation back out to the grid for others (maybe you?) to use. In putting that data out to the grid (presumably to similar type machines) the waste heat is locally captured and directed accordingly.
 
While there are a ton of applications for that extra computing power, your community seems to have the greatest immediate use and quite frankly, the most available source of expertise.
 
In the coming weeks, we'll be starting a KS campaign to raise money for R&D. Ideally, we'd actually like to crowd source a lot of the R&D particularly as we develop the distributed networking capacity. There is R&D related to materials as well, but that's wet lab based and will address different issues.
 
www.3xergy.com (pronounced Exergy)
 
Would love your comments, comments and feed back in this thread, but please feel free to reach out directly via the website's contact form.

 
Thank you for your time.
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