They claim 12.6 watts/kg. A fully reusable Starship is expected to orbit 100 to 150 tons of cargo, so ~1 to 2 megawatts of compute per launch.
A 1MW datacenter in the US would cost around $10M to build, and consume around $100k/month in electricity, free to the satellite.
A Starship launch is projected to cost around $10M, which doesn't include the satellites. So it looks more expensive than a conventional data center even with optimistic assumptions. It may depend on those becoming more expensive to be practical.
What will the data-center operations team look like and who is "go for launch" to replace a failed component? Will DCOps be rocket robots and just hang out in space? But seriously what is the real purpose of this and don't say AI. If so those would have to be some incredibly massive never seen before solar panels.
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[ 5.7 ms ] story [ 17.7 ms ] threadhttps://x.com/seti_park/status/2015114363531866448
They claim 12.6 watts/kg. A fully reusable Starship is expected to orbit 100 to 150 tons of cargo, so ~1 to 2 megawatts of compute per launch.
A 1MW datacenter in the US would cost around $10M to build, and consume around $100k/month in electricity, free to the satellite.
A Starship launch is projected to cost around $10M, which doesn't include the satellites. So it looks more expensive than a conventional data center even with optimistic assumptions. It may depend on those becoming more expensive to be practical.