A couple fundamental questions arise in this sort of strategy (which is nothing 
really new, although technology advances are making it easier)

1) orbital debris - fling those thousands of widgets out there.  Are they high 
enough to stay in orbit for a while? Are they going to damage things that hit 
them? 
2) orbital mechanics - the "array" pretty much has to be flat, that is, they're 
all at the same orbit height, otherwise they'll drift apart, since the period 
is different.   There's also a whole raft of issues about orientation, etc., 
stability of the orbit.  As we all know, the earth is not a perfect sphere with 
perfect 1/r^2 gravity.  There are some remarkably stable orbits (I worked on a 
satellite that is in one: QuikSCAT 801km orbit at 98.6 degree inclination, a 
perfect 4 day repeat cycle that is very stable)

3) does it really save anything to put the computation in orbit? As much as I 
love computing in space (particularly deep space), if you had a solar powered 
conventional data center on the ground and a fat comm pipe to those third world 
countries, wouldn't that work as well?  The solar plant on the ground will see 
about 1/3 the solar power as one in the right orbit (which may not be stable, 
see #2), but mass to orbit is expensive, so why not put all those solar cells 
to work on the earth's surface, rather than spending energy to put them into 
orbit.

I'd like to see more justification of the 100x cost differential between ground 
and space 25 years from now. 

Jim Lux


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Eugen Leitl
Sent: Friday, June 21, 2013 3:32 AM
To: [email protected]; [email protected]; NANOG list; forkit!
Subject: [Beowulf] Server Sky - Internet and computation in orbit


(This may be Wacky Friday, but this one is not tongue in cheek -- the name 
Keith Lofstrom should ring a bell).

http://server-sky.com/

Server Sky - internet and computation in orbit

It is easier to move terabits than kilograms or megawatts. Space solar power 
will solve the energy crisis. Sooner if we process space power into high value 
computation before we send it to earth. Computation is most valuable where it 
is rarest - in the rural developing world. Human attention is the most valuable 
resource on earth, and Server Sky space-based internet can transport that 
attention from where it is most abundant to where it is most valued.

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